THEATER REVIEW: “By the Bog of Cats” @ Ensemble Theatre by Roy Berko

Through Sun 9/29

As By the Bog of Cats opens, “We see Hester, dragging a dead black swan across the snow and ice at the Bog of Cats. The Ghost Fancier has come to collect her but realizes that he is early as Hester is still alive. The Ghost Fancier exits and says that he will return at a later time.” And, after an enveloping several hours, he returns. By then, mystical and mythical elements, ghosts, curses, the role of motherhood, abandonment, betrayal and ethnic prejudice, and death have been revealed.

Ensemble Theater has chosen to start its 40th season with By the Bog of Cats by Mariana Carr, generally recognized as Ireland’s greatest living playwright, a play loosely based on Greek myth and Euripides’s tragic play Medea. In Medea, the female antihero, who has been cast aside by her husband Jason for a younger woman, seeks revenge. To get back at him, she kills their two sons and his new bride, leaving Jason bereft.

In Medea, the female antihero, who has been cast aside by her husband Jason for a younger woman, seeks revenge. To get back at him, she kills their two sons and his new bride, leaving Jason bereft. Though the ending is quite different, there are Medea parallels in Carr’s script. But the writing and performance elements are pure Irish, especially as it takes on the themes of displacement and disposition, elements not present in Greece of old, or that of its tales.

The play, which takes place in the Bog of Cats, a bleak, foreboding and frozen rural landscape in the Irish midlands, touches on Irish myth, but adds the well-known characteristics of Irish alcoholism, depression, greed and the outcome of living in a land of constant rain, clouds, gloom and doom.

By the Bog of Cats is as much a character-study as it is a plot-driven script.

 Hester Swaine is a 40-year-old woman who has lived on the bog her entire life. When she was seven years old, her mother Josie,abandoned her. Hester has been waiting there for her mother ever since. Hester has a daughter, Josie, with Carthage Kilbride, a much younger man. She is very resentful that Carthage has left her to marry Caroline, the daughter of wealthy landowner, Xavier Cassidy, so that he can inherit the Cassidy farm. During their relationship, Hester encouraged Carthage to have ambitions beyond his social class as a laborer’s son, even giving Carthage the money to buy his first land.

Josie is the same age that Hester was when her mother left her. The girl is caring and loving. She foreshadow’s the horrific conclusion to the play by singing sad songs her mother has taught her.

Carthage’s mother looks down on Hester because Hester belongs to the “tinker class,” people who, much like European gypsys, wander in search of odd jobs to make money, by using trickery and sexual favors. Mrs. Kilbride, a self-centered, greedy person, constantly focuses on issues of social class and money and calls her granddaughter a “little bastard” because she was born out of wedlock.

Xavier Cassidy is a wealthy landowner and father of Caroline, who “stole” Carthage from Hester. In order to ensure his daughter’s happiness, and to rid himself of the guilt of having been responsible for driving off Hester’s mother whom he used for sexual pleasure, he is also determined to rid the bog of Hester.

The cast is solid. Multi-Cleveland Critics Circle and Broadwayworld award winner Derdriu Ring gives another accolade-worthy performance as Hester. Ring, who was born in Ireland and trained at the Gaiety School of Acting in Dublin, personally knows the ways of the Irish. She doesn’t have to portray Irish angst; she lives it onstage. Her accent and realistic character development add a special quality to the production.

Though he can’t reach Ring’s levels, Daniel Telford gives a very credible performance as Carthage. Julia Kolibab is properly repugnant as Mrs. Kilbride. She gives the kind of performance that encourages an audience to boo her character in the curtain call, while cheering the portrayal.

The fragmentary set and lighting do little to really take us to the bog. The significance of the upstage knotted cloth streams seems unclear. Celeste Cosentino nicely paces the work, tutoring the cast well on keeping the characters real, even in the fantasy scenes.

Capsule judgment: Much in the tradition of Brian Friel and James Joyce, By the Bog of Cats is one of those Irish angst plays that share the customs and folkways of the Emerald Isle. The Ensemble production is nicely conceived, with a master class in performance skills by Derdriu Ring.

By the Bog of Cats runs through Sun 9/29 on Fridays and Saturdays @ 8 pm and Sundays @ 2pm.  For tickets call 216-321-2930 or go online to ensemble-theatre.

[Written by Roy Berko, member: American Theatre Critics Association, Cleveland Critics Circle]

Cleveland, OH 44118

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