Mary’s Babies
Jermyn Street Theatre
Reviewed – 22nd March 2019
β β β
“a hugely ambitious play that doesnβt quite succeed in its intentions”
In the 1930s, Dr Mary Barton and her husband, Dr Bertold Wiesner, founded one of the first clinics to treat infertility with donor insemination. Because the practice was new, there were no regulations regarding donor selection. Barton said she had a small pool of select donors, but thanks to DNA testing, we now know the majority of the 1,500 women who were treated by Barton were inseminated with Wiesnerβs sperm.
Written by Maud Dromgoole and directed by Tatty Hennessy, Maryβs Babies imagines various intersecting lives of a handful of people who discover they share Wiesnerβs DNA. Thereβs considerable skill in Dromgooleβs windows into lives that are rich, genuine, and occasionally touching. However, despite the creative teamβs best efforts to maintain clarity, with just two actors multi-roling so many different characters with such abrupt alternation, a lot is lost in the shuffle.
Katy Stephens and Emma Fielding take on a total of thirty-nine different characters, although the play primarily revolves around five. Stephens and Fielding are strong performers (they admirably handled a technical difficulty which stopped the show midway), and Stephens in particular impresses with her vivid transformations. An ingenious set design (Anna Reid) that displays the names of the characters on a wall, which light up according to who is in each scene, is indispensable.
But even with first-rate multi-roling and displayed character names, the play can be difficult to follow. Hennessyβs choice of minimalism for an informationally dense piece, and Dromgooleβs choppy, short scenes with vague dialogue, leave large gaps for meaning to fall through. Entire scenes often hinge on one word that is too easily lost. I missed the word βeulogyβ in the opening monologue, so didnβt get why Stephens was reading off a script, thinking it couldnβt be possible she didnβt have the lines memorised. I missed the word βpolydactylβ in another scene, and was perplexed by the fuss about Stephensβ hand.
Additionally, the charactersβ ages donβt transmit well. A reveal toward the end that two characters are twins doesnβt click; I spent the performance believing one was about ten years younger than the other. All of them, who are dating and planning/having children, seem to be in their thirties. Kieran, arguably the main character, comes off as early twenties. They jar with the maths, which says their age range is forty to eighty (the play takes place in 2007 and the clinic closed in 1967). Itβs evident Dromgoole wanted to write younger characters. The play may have been stronger if it were set in the present, about a fictional artificial insemination scandal in the 1980s.
This is a hugely ambitious play that doesnβt quite succeed in its intentions. Too much visual and verbal information fails to communicate. The script seems better suited to film, which would solve a lot of its problems.
Reviewed by Addison Waite
Photography by Robert Workman
Mary’s Babies
Jermyn Street Theatre until 13th April
Previously reviewed at this venue:
Mad as Hell | β β β | February 2018
The Dog Beneath the Skin | β β β | March 2018
Tonight at 8.30 | β β β β β | April 2018
Tomorrow at Noon | β β β β | May 2018
Stitchers | β β β Β½ | June 2018
The Play About my Dad | β β β β | June 2018
Hymn to Love | β β β | July 2018
Burke & Hare | β β β β | November 2018
Original Death Rabbit | β β β β β | January 2019
Agnes Colander: An Attempt At Life | β β β β | February 2019
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