I've written about Bernard Shaw's play The Devil's Disciple, and seen the Hollywood movie based on it, so I was particularly keen to watch the latest New York revival of this comedy, now showing on Theatre Row.
Gingold Theatrical Group produced this new version, which was adapted and directed by David Staller to feature only five actors--all female--who perform this testosterone-driven tale of the American Revolution with grace and style.
A framing device introduced by Staller shows a young woman who has inherited a house as old as our country, and much like the current United States, badly in need of some serious work. The woman, played by Folami Williams, discovers the house is haunted by numerous ghosts. She then finds the diary of one of the house's first inhabitants, Judith Anderson, wife of a stalwart Presbyterian minister, the Reverend Anthony Anderson.
Williams then takes on the persona of Judith, while the ghosts perform all of the other roles. The cast does an amazing job, with Tina Chilip playing Rev. Anderson, and Nadia Brown playing the bad boy Dick Dudgeon, the titular Devil's Disciple who rebels not just against the British but against his puritan upbringing represented by his mother (played with ice-cold ferocity by Susan Cella). Assorted other roles are filled in by the ever-versatile Teresa Avia Lim, who previously appeared as the Queen of Egypt in GTG's production of Caesar and Cleopatra.
Toward the end of the play, Staller inserts a speech Shaw wrote for a revival of the play starring Maurice Evans, in which America is hailed as "a land that will never be home to kings or tyrants or demagogues." That line lands a little differently post-election than it did before, but perhaps that just means we need it there now more than ever.
The show is playing until November 23rd, so if you haven't seen it yet, go! This is a revival you won't want to miss.