Agnes of God | |
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Written by | John Pielmeier |
Characters |
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Date premiered | 1979 |
Place premiered | Eugene O'Neill Theater Center |
Original language | English |
Subject | Drama |
Setting | A convent |
Agnes of God is a 1979play by American playwrightJohn Pielmeier which tells the story of a novice nun who gives birth but does not believe she has. After the child is found dead, a psychiatrist and themother superior of theconvent clash during the resulting investigation. The title is a pun on the Latin phraseAgnus Dei ("lamb of God").
The stage play concerns three main characters: Martha, the psychiatrist; the Mother Superior; and Agnes, the novice. There are no other characters on stage. All three roles are considered demanding for the actors playing them.[1] Martha covers the full gamut of emotion during the play, from antagonist to nurturer, from hard nosed court psychiatrist and atheist to faith-searching healer. She is always on stage and has only three small respites from monologues or dialogue while Agnes and the Mother Superior enact flashbacks to events at the convent. The Mother Superior must expound the possibilities of miracles while recognizing the realities of today's world. Agnes is a beautiful but tormented soul whose abusive upbringing has affected her ability to think rationally.
Character | 1979 Eugene O'Neill cast | 1980 Louisville cast | 1982 Broadway cast | 1983 1st National tour cast | 1983 London cast | 1985 Film cast |
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Mother Miriam Ruth | Jacqueline Brookes | Anne Pitoniak | Geraldine Page | Mercedes McCambridge | Honor Blackman | Anne Bancroft |
Dr. Martha Livingstone | Jo Henderson | Adale O'Brien | Elizabeth Ashley | Elizabeth Ashley | Susannah York | Jane Fonda |
Sister Agnes | Dianne Wiest | Mia Dillon | Amanda Plummer | Maryann Plunkett | Hilary Reynolds | Meg Tilly |
The play first was staged at theEugene O'Neill Theater Center in Waterford, Connecticut in 1979. In 1980, it was further developed at theActors Theatre of Louisville. Pielmeier had been an actor at both of these venues and had turned to playwriting; he began writingAgnes of God in the summer of 1978.[2][3]
The play opened on Broadway on March 30, 1982 at theMusic Box Theatre and closed on September 4, 1983 after 599 performances.Amanda Plummer received theTony Award forBest Featured Actress in a Play, and Page was nominated forBest Actress in a Play. The director wasMichael Lindsay-Hogg.[4]
During the run,Elizabeth Ashley was succeeded in her role byDiahann Carroll andAmanda Plummer byMia Dillon,Carrie Fisher andMaryann Plunkett.Lee Remick played the psychiatrist in the show's pre-Broadway run in Boston[5][6] and was advertised for the New York run but left the show before the New York opening.[7] A national tour was launched in 1983.[8]
In 1983, the play was staged in London at theGreenwich Theatre. A production also was staged at theCenter Stage Theatre in Baltimore, Maryland, starring Tania Myren-Zobel as Agnes.[9][10]
In 1984, the play was staged inMexico City. The production starredMarga López,María Teresa Rivas andBlanca Guerra in the main roles.[11]
The National Tour starred Ashley, Plunkett, andMercedes McCambridge. There were also two summer stock productions, one starringSandy Dennis andGeraldine Page, and the other starringPeggy Cass andSusan Strasberg.
The 1985 film adaptation was directed byNorman Jewison, with a script also written by Pielmeier. It garnered three Academy Award nominations:Meg Tilly was nominated for theAcademy Award for Best Supporting Actress,Anne Bancroft for Lead Actress for her performance as Mother Miriam, and Best Score.Anne Pitoniak, who played Miriam Ruth in the 1980 cast, also appears in the film, this time as the mother of Dr. Livingston.
Pielmeier was inspired to write the play after seeing an article in a newspaper about an event that occurred in a convent inBrighton, New York, just outside the city limits ofRochester.[12] Sister Maureen Murphy, a thirty-six-year-oldMontessori teacher, was found bleeding in her room by the other sisters of the convent after she did not come down for meals. Sister Maureen denied she had given birth; when examined by medical staff, she said she could not remember being pregnant. She had covered up the pregnancy by wearing the traditional nun'shabit. The baby was found dead in her small convent room in a waste basket,asphyxiated.[13]
The police found ticket stubs and other information in the nun's room indicating that precisely nine months earlier she had traveled out of state to an educational conference.[failed verification] During the trial, the father of the baby was never named.[14][15][16]
At her trial, Sister Maureen waived her right to a jury, and Judge Hyman Maas presided. The trial was over in ten days, and Maas found the nun not guilty of all charges by reason of insanity in March 1977.[17][18]The convent where the incident occurred is adjacent to the still-functioning suburban parish and school. The convent is used to houseUniversity of Rochester graduate students. The girls' high school, St. Agnes, where some of the nuns taught, is closed.[19]
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