A Letter From The General

 A Letter From The General poster

Written by: Maurice McLoughlin

Directed by: Ian Lodge

October 2009

The play is set in a Mission Station for orphaned children in 'an Eastern Country' during the year 1950. A new Communist government has taken over and there has been persecution of Nuns and Priests throughout the province. The Mission has been cut off from the local village and the orphaned children have been removed.

A group of five Irish Nuns run the Mission and their resident Priest, a German national, has been captured and tortured by the Communist regime. The Priest manages to escape and a group of soldiers headed by Captain Lee are sent to the Mission because it is suspected that the Priest will make his way back there.

Unbeknown to Captain Lee, the Reverend Mother is already hiding the Priest who managed to reach the Mission before the soldiers.

In the mean time the British Consul for the area together with his wife Ruth visits the Mission. The British consul has exit visas for all of the Nuns and, due to the fact that he is unaware of the hidden Priest, cannot understand why the Reverend Mother is reluctant to leave. Both the Consul and his wife have a deep-seated dislike of Germans because of their son's death in the Second World War. Ruth begins to suspect that the Nuns professed lack of knowledge regarding the location of the German Priest may not be as truthful as they would have her believe!

She is not the only one who is unconvinced of the Nuns innocence in the matter as the sadistic Captain Lee starts to put pressure on the nuns to reveal the whereabouts of the Priest.

As events are unfolding, a letter arrives from Mei Cheng the governing General of the province addressed to Sister Magdalen. This elderly Nun looked after Mei Cheng when he was an orphaned boy many years previously and is the Generals Godmother.

Can this letter, together with an ancient Oriental curse visited upon the cowardly Captain Lee culminate in the escape of the Nuns together with their fugitive Priest? We shall have to wait and see.

Cast List

Character
Actor
Sister Lucy
Gail Hughes
Sister Henry
Glenys Young
Sister Bridget
Sharon Free
Rev. Mother
Gina Daldry
Sister Magdalen
Ann Doherty
Arthur Stilton
Phil Davis
Ruth Stilton
Julia Cohen
Captain Lee
Barry Kirk
Father Schiller
Keith Goody

Reviews

How refreshing to see a company tackle a drama with a strong storyline and good characterization, rather than a superficial, albeit entertaining, comedy. This play, by Maurice McLoughlin, made strong demands of its cast and packed a powerful punch with its tension and emotion. The set was excellent and conveyed well the spartan quarters of a religious mission, with good use being made of back lighting and additional scenery through the windows and door. I can't remember whether there was introductory music or link music between scenes; if there was it made no impression on me; if there wasn't I would recommend it be considered in future. Appropriate music settles the audience at the beginning and can help maintain tension and interest through the scene changes. Costumes were good, especially Ruth Stilton's dresses which were the most obviously contemporary costumes, the rest being rather timeless habits and uniforms. With respect to characterization there were two standout performances; Sharon Free as Sister Bridget and Julia Cohen as Ruth Stilton. Sister Bridget, portrayed as a novice (in the religious hierarchical sense of the word), with her hair over her eyes and her youthful lack of restraint, developed empathy with her audience straight away. Her Irish accent seemed to me not only flawless but her projection, fluency and timing were also impeccable. She may have been a few psalms short of a New Testament but she was gutsy and irrepressible. Such an authentic Irish accent does set a standard for the others and I wonder whether the director agonized over the issue. For my money Sister Lucy was on par with Bridget, although the character was less interesting. I would have encouraged the others to stick to English. There was only one reference to going home to Ireland in the whole play; besides a Mother Superior would probably have had a better education and there must have been English catholics in Chinese missions! Ruth Stilton played the "bored housewife" to a tee. Her very slightly clipped, yet accent-less English was just right for the time and her position as the wife of a minor diplomat. Her distracted air, self-absorption and inner turmoil slowly dissolved as she was able to displace the entirely negative thoughts surrounding her blind hatred of Germans, following the death of her son in the war, with a more positive and compassionate defence of a priest, despite him being German. The catalyst for this wonderful irony was the aggressive behaviour of an English soldier, who had joined, on pain of death, the Chinese Republican Army and was now responsible for removing the nuns from the mission and closing it down. In many ways Barry Kirk, as Captain Lee, had the most difficult role. He was prone to violent outbursts as well as irrational fears for his own health and well-being, perhaps emanating from his own poor sense of security and his entrapment in a world he didn't belong to or understand. He coped well with this role and while his lack of stature, compared with Father Schiller, was presumably not deliberate casting, a strong sense of the Napoleon complex came through. The final word must go to Ann Doherty as Sister Magdalen in what was a pivotal but almost cameo role. Her simple but touching faith in her former pupil who was now a Chinese General was shattered in the final scene as she tears up the letter from the General, presumably in response to her own. As an audience we are left to ponder what is in the letter but we must surmise from Sister Magdalen's emotional breakdown that she has sacrificed her own life for that of Father Schiller. However, her distress is less the concern over her decision than the reason for it - the misplaced faith in a young boy who has eschewed everything Sister Magdalen stands for and chosen a path of violence and destruction. Ann Doherty captured all of these emotions in her quiet and dignified performance.

Stuart Adkins, NODA