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MY SISTER IN THIS
HOUSE
by Wendy Kesselman
WingSpan Theatre
Company
The Bath House
Cultural Center
Directed by
Marjorie Hayes
CAST:
Catherine DuBord
Whitney Wilson
Susan Sargeant
Stephanie Stuart
Reviewed by Christopher Soden,
Associate Theatre Critic for
John Garcia's THE COLUMN
MY SISTER IN THIS HOUSE
Despite the grisly results, the murders committed by Christine and Lea
Papin captured the imagination, psyche and political sensibilities of great
philosophers, psychoanalysts, artists, the population of France (and the
rest of the world) when they were originally discovered in 1933.
Sisters who survived as live-in housekeepers (cook and chambermaid) in Le
Mans, France, the two were found naked in bed together, embracing, after
murdering their mistress, Madame Lancelin and her adult daughter.
The bodies bore not only the evidence of the fatal blows, but extensive
mutilation, including eyes gouged with fingers, deep slicing wounds and
obvious steps to denigrate them. Theories came from every corner as to the
reasoning behind such savage mayhem and the nature of the sisters'
attachment.
The victims, of course, could not speak for themselves, and the
perpetrators, whether by reason of catatonia, intuitive wisdom, or possibly
both, provided little illumination. Seventy-six years later, it is
surprising to find the lengthy list of treatments devoted to the Papin case,
or perhaps, not so surprising at all. Films, both documentary and narrative,
plays (including Jean Genet's The Maids) books, articles, an opera, all seek
through speculation and conjecture to explain this heinous crime.
Experts sometimes cited a dehumanizing caste system and blurred
distinctions between criminality and social anarchy. Even for servants
living in a blatantly tiered society the Papins were treated abominably.
It's certainly conceivable that any pair so severely diminished and
marginalized may have felt they had nothing to lose by ignoring boundaries
(however appropriate) conferred by a culture that had little use for them as
individuals.
Which brings us to WingSpan Theatre Company's current production of My
Sister in This House, written by Wendy Kesselman (1982). My Sister in This
House, is an intelligent, sometimes lurid, sometimes tender, and profoundly
disturbing drama inspired by the notorious homicides, which takes the
lesbian aspect of the sisters' relationship as fact. When their attorney
explained to them that confessing to such behavior would probably exonerate
the two (by reason of insanity) one denied of them it outright, while the
other said nothing. Which is to say the question has never been answered
with utter certainty and probably never will.
There is much to suggest (from their personal family history) the
plausible underpinnings of an incestuous relationship between Christine and
Lea Papin, to a large degree reflected in the play's milieu. That said, the
story of these two lost souls : degraded, betrayed, molested, abandoned,
exploited, is all about the transgression that often occurs in response to
systematic abuse. Lesbianism and incest can both be construed as forms of
transgression.
They can also be interpreted as survival techniques employed by the
severely damaged and isolated. Neither of which necessarily means the Papins
had a se*ual relationship. It's very possible Kesselman had artistic reasons
for choosing to depict the sisters in this light, apart from her personal
beliefs about the nature of their bond.
My Sister in This House transpires in the pressure cooker dwelling of
Madame and Isabelle Danzard. There are no male performers and when the two
maids go to pose for a picture, the photographer's voice comes from
offstage. After a long separation, Christine and Lea have reunited in the
household occupied by the crusty insipid matriarch, and her grown daughter.
Both of the sisters' wages go to their mother and they work a sixteen-hour
day, cooking for and meticulously cleaning up after the two women, in
addition to sewing, ironing, dusting and making sure a candy wrapper is
removed before ten seconds have passed.
It doesn't take long to infer the sinister dynamics at work in the
Danzard home.
At first the mother and daughter seem innocuous enough, but soon we come
to understand the ugliness of a matron who gloats at the abundance of labor
she gets for shelling out a pittance, manipulates servants who desperately
crave approval, and uses them as whipping boys when she can't act out
against her daughter. Initially, it seems preposterous when she and Isabelle
see Lea in a nice sweater and nearly have a stroke. When the other shoe
drops, and we realize this is viewed as some flagrant act of insubordination
(attire disproportionate to her station) the effect is alarming and
incendiary. All this tumult from wearing an oversized sweater in a drafty
old house.
Kesselman uses a doubling technique common to drama with cunning
expertise. Anytime you see two pairs in a story, the author is very likely
inviting a comparison and such is the case here, with the mother/daughter
pair exhibited in contrast to the intense and devoted sisters. There is
plenty of friction between Madame and Isabelle to be sure, but it is
subjugated under the guise of pretense and appeasement.
Lea and Christine inhabit a shadow realm of those whose lives have been
trivialized and demeaned. Yet for all that they stand in high relief to the
vapid Danzards. They are genuine in their desire to please and be loved.
Clare Floyd DeVries has created a breathtaking, unnerving set, with
dismal, blunted colors, and the capacity to exhibit action in several places
at once. It is cramped as if viewed through a fisheye lens, staircase
descending as if on a path to madness. Entering the theater, we're
immediately struck by its consuming presence, evoking interiors from films
such as The Innocents, The Haunting or Ingmar Berman's Persona.
Barbara Cox's costume design is mischievous and inventive, making dresses
for Madame and her daughter identical enough to suggest thematic twinning,
but different enough to create tension. It isn't just about the matching
black maid's uniforms, it's the mannish undergarments and eerily suggestive
stockings and wedding trousseau so exquisite it's nearly angelic. It's about
a dainty, pristine apron that can double as a wimple and nightgowns that
seem oppressive and rustic.
Director Marjorie Hayes has handled this volatile, impossibly charged
content with amazing skill and confidence. Armed with a cast of four
powerful, precise actors she has managed this material, suffused with
calamity and sensuality, coquettishness and barbarism, daydreams and
nightmares, making it comprehensible without resorting to facility or
rushing to judgment. The slow burn, the bizarre eroticism, the childhood
fantasy, the grotesque megalomania, it all weaves into an otherworldly
fabric. Like a negligee or shroud.
Catherine DuBord as Christine is forceful, contained, vigilant, nearly
submerging the terror and longing that informs her compulsive attention to
detail. Christine is the most complex of the characters in My Sister and
DuBord gives her grace, authority and rage. When she pleads with Madame for
mercy, promising she won't cry again, you just melt. I cannot begin to
describe the tremendous emotional demands of such a role, but only express
my admiration for Ms. DuBord's talent, dedication and vulnerability.
Whitney Wilson is pitch perfect as Lea, the effusive, tremulous younger
sister, fraught with self-doubts and self-loathing. Thin and waiflike and
looking sometimes like the gaunt, quintessential orphan, Ms. Wilson has so
much electricity and raw feeling, you can understand why older sister
Christine feels so protective. There's ferocity beneath the agitation and
fear Wilson expresses, we feel it lurking, ready to pounce.
Madame Danzard is played by Susan Sargeant, and she's got an excellence
mix of maternal neuroses mixed with girlish vivacity. Madame is a dodgy
combination, steely one moment and affable the next. Her behavior towards
Isabelle suggests the airy affection missing from Lea and Christine's
mother, while still implying the jabs and gibes that happen in any family.
Sargeant accommodates this sleek duplicity beautifully, with versatility and
resolve.
Stephanie Stuart as Isabelle Danzard plays the bitchy, platinum blonde
ingénue, who must endure her mother's dominance, but in turn, is all too
happy to torment Lea, dangling a sweet with wanton delectation. As with
Madame, there's a duality to the part of Isabelle. We gather she has little
going on beyond attachment to her mother, that she, too, feels lonely and
excluded. But then, she also rejects the opportunity for kindness when she
has venom to spew.
There's a nearly fleeting hysteria in My Sister that evinces slowly at
the outset, gradually building (without intermission) to the volcano that
boils over when Christine finally snaps. Christine believes she's unlovable
because she's flawed and only if she remains perfect can she ever hope to be
loved. When she discovers that Madame's approval is specious and arbitrary
at best (perhaps like her own mother?) her disillusionment quickly turns to
overflowing anger.
It's difficult to do justice to that instant, its overwhelming havoc and
destruction, without buckling to ghoulish fascination. My Sister handles it
with balance and discretion. This may be a story about retribution and
unbridled fury, but it's also about subsisting in the throes of unremitting
pain.
Reviewed by Christopher Soden, Associate Theatre Critic for John Garcia's
THE COLUMN
__________________________________________________________________
WingSpan Theatre Company presents My Sister in This House, by Wendy
Kesselman, playing October 8th -24th. In cooperation with The Bath House
Cultural Center, 521 East Lawther Drive, Dallas, Texas 75218. 214-675-6573.
www.wingspantheatre.com. |