Posted on 10/23/2013 2:06:19 PM PDT by Alex Murphy
I left the National Youth Theatres production of Pope Joan feeling both angry and extremely moved. The disputed myth of the first and only female Pope touched something very deep in my psychology. Pope Joan is a medieval tale about the alleged first (and only) female Pope who rose to the top of the Vatican styling herself as John- she is devout, brave and willing to risk anything to be close to God. Prior to the start of the action, Joan has revealed her true identity to a Cardinal in the Vatican who she has slept with and is now carrying his child, obviously problematic in her desire to maintain her male disguise.
Joans problems, therefore, are tenfold. She is not blameless in the childs conception and does not wish to keepit, as her cover will be blown. However, by aborting the child she feels as if she would be angering God because this would be a disavowal of Gods gift to females: the ability to procreate. Sophie Crawfords (Joan) expressive eyes internalise this pain and conflict, in a tour de force of a performance. Crawford makes it clear that is her body that is her betrayer, and that she is torn in a fundamental dichotomy between her faith and her biology. Although her faith is stronger than any mans, her body renders this faith heretical. She dies a martyr as she is discovered when she goes into labour whilst giving a delivering a sermon in the pulpit.
The setting of the play in St Jamess Church, in Piccadilly is perfect for the production. It allows designer Fi Russell to excel in creating an extremely atmospheric setting, because she has already been given the gift of the ornate church wall and stained glass to work from as a backdrop. She has pushed the altar back and has filled the floor space with an enormous horizontal white cross. This acts as a raised stage for the action, and is a constant reminder throughout the play of Christs bodily sacrifice to God, reflecting upon Joans own struggle with her body.
Considering this is her first published play, Louise Brealeys script is excellent, particularly the dialogue between Joan and her antagonist, the snarling Cardinal Anastasius who wants the papacy for himself, played with a sting by Robert Willoughby. The most powerful moment in the show is a silent physical scene where director Paul Hart uses the National Youth Theatres ensemble training to create a staircase up the isles and to the to Church altar which Crawford climbs up, breasts bared reaching out in desperation to the edifice of Christ above her head. She is prepared to give her body over entirely to Christ, but it is that same body and the child growing inside her that nullifies her connection with God.
Richard Geller and John Lipman have excelled in their creating the costumes for this piece. In tandem with Russells design and the church setting, Joans papal robes are heavily brocaded, creating an authoritarian sweep around he as she commands the Vatican, cutting through the dust of the Church. Anastasius is dressed, fittingly, in long and rich Satan-red robes, elongating Willoughbys already tall natural height to make him tower above Joan and the rest of the Vatican, a genuine threat. The strengths in this production are typical of the National Youth Theatre, as they lie in the incorporation of the space into the ensemble work. As you sit in the pews, the Vatican meets, squabbles and shouts all around you, creating a multi-sensory experience where the entire cast is valuable in creating the scene around you.
Although this is a fictional story and has become long-embroiled in Christian and urban mythology, the tale of Pope Joan is particularly pertinent to todays modern professional women facing the problems of maintaining a work-life balance between their career ambitions and their desire (or not) to have a family. Pope Joan is an aptly timed show, performed just as the bill to allow women bishops in Wales was passed, proof that the Church is finally accepting that the strength of your faith is irrelevant to your gender.
His human nature began at the Incarnation, but His divine nature is divine — without beginning or end. Your original statement didn’t make that clear.
Well then Christ IS STILL a creature, for you guys...
my answer didn't print either time.....so I'll say it again, Catholics worshiped and honored Christ as the creator 1,600 years before you even knew who He was.
NO, Only to someone who doesn't understand context.
Nope. You’re wrong. As usual.
Bread and Wine were often items of sacrifice. In any case. read your Bible again.
Must be true. Saw it on BBC, which never lies about the Papacy ... much.
Now what about this Pope Joan character? True? False? Was she, wasn't she? The Vatican ain't talkin'.
IMNVHO, the problem with Roman Catholicism is that it's so .... well, like "Roman." I mean it probably has not escaped your notice that both the Pope and Julius Caesar share the Pontifex Maximus title?
That, and a million other things, are a living connection to the classical world of Greece and Rome, which I personally think is often quite admirable, but excites nothing but fear and loathing in others who are always mumbling about "idolatry, pagan practices, and rituals."
That all of Bullfinch's Mythology somehow got itself converted, baptized, and sanctified does not subtract a jot from the Sacrifice of Christ for our Salvation.
He was a Reformer, not a Wiper-Outer.
This, this I am now going to check out. Hope there's a good bar on the same street!
Really??? Where???
It is impossible to point out scripturally where you are right and I am wrong so you resort to another typical Catholic response, read your bible again...
Is this supposed to make you sound like some kind of authority???
Because you said so, eh??? You want to put some bible verses in there to refute what I posted??? NO??? That's because you can't...
Two references to topic , one in Genesis and the other in Hebrews. I am sure that you know where they are.
That little bit of scripture tells a story...A story about religious bozos who wear black robes, and robes adorned with gold...Priests...Priests holding crosses who want you to think that only they have the power of the Holy Spirit...
Priests who want you to call them Father...And bishop...And cardinal...and pope...
Jesus then says, 'Do not do it'...
Jesus was a Bishop... Your religion has arch-bishops, cardinals, popes and who knows what else which are higher in rank than Jesus...
I am not surprised that a protestant can’t tell the difference between a play house and a monument.
You should see the Kennedy bust inside. Looks like wall to wall acne.
That was said years ago when the place first opened.
The Mall is for the rabble. The Kennedy Center is for the Hoity-toidy.
More than that...
But there is no reference to a sacrifice...If anything it's an acknowledgment and celebration of Abraham's victory...
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