'The Welkin' review: Is she guilty, pregnant or both?

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Sunday, June 23, 2024


'The Welkin' review: Is she guilty, pregnant or both?
Haley Wong and others perform a scene from “The Welkin” at the Linda Gross Theater in Manhattan, May 15, 2024. The Lucy Kirkwood script is a somber yet witty examination of how women labor — with housework, with children and with a society of men that doesn’t serve them — and how they negotiate their assumed responsibilities with their desires. (Jeenah Moon/The New York Times)

by Maya Phillips



NEW YORK, NY.- The final word of “The Welkin” — a soft “oh” of realization that left the theater breathless — is more of an utterance, the coo of an innocent young babe. But the speaker isn’t a child; she’s a grown woman.

And she’s accused of murder.

It’s England in 1759, just around the time everyone is buzzing about the arrival of Halley’s comet. This woman, Sally Poppy (played by Haley Wong), and her lover are accused of the killing and dismemberment of the young daughter of the rich family for which Sally worked. She’s set to hang, but there’s a hitch: Sally claims she’s pregnant.

“The Welkin” is a kind of courtroom drama or, rather, a clever perversion of such; technically we don’t see the courtroom, just a dim, dungeonlike room nearby where a forum of 12 matrons has been convened. They’re not Sally’s final adjudicators (that job is for the men, after all) but the jurors ruling on the women’s issue in this case: whether Sally’s actually pregnant.

A little bit “The Crucible” and a lot bit the 2022 film “Women Talking,” in all the best ways, “The Welkin,” which opened Wednesday at Atlantic Theater Company’s Linda Gross Theater, is a somber yet witty examination of how women labor — with housework, with children and with a society of men that doesn’t serve them — and how they negotiate their assumed responsibilities with their desires.

“The Welkin” successfully depicts these women as unique individuals, representing women from different strata of society, and with different prejudices and viewpoints. Each one is memorable, from the stately outsider, Charlotte Cary (Mary McCann), a colonel’s widow in a stylish crown of a hat, to Mary Middleton (Susannah Perkins), an awkward, superstitious young woman who is worried only about getting home to her crop of leeks.

The impressive script, by Lucy Kirkwood, and likewise direction, by Sarah Benson, snap to life in the form of a robust ensemble cast led by Sandra Oh as Elizabeth Luke, the local midwife who intends to see that Sally isn’t the victim of an unfair verdict. Oh offers a grounded, sympathetic heroine who is, despite her reasoning and moralizing, still fallible. Wong also gives an entrancing performance as Sally, who reads like a living, breathing provocation: in turns vicious, scornful, irreverent and wild. Other standouts include Nadine Malouf as the petty Emma Jenkins; Dale Soules as Sarah Smith, the wise veteran matron with nearly two dozen children; and Jennifer Nikki Kidwell’s mature and levelheaded Ann Lavender.

Much like Kirkwood’s other work, which includes “The Children” and “Chimerica,” “The Welkin” is full of language that playfully shifts from bleak to comic, formal to casual; from obscuring its characters’ motivations to revealing them at just the right moment of dramatic tension. Kirkwood’s poetic turns relate earnest emotion, as when the convicted murderess rhapsodizes about a romance in which “the wanting rose up around me like milk boiling,” or brutal irony, as when a male doctor who examines her speaks of the “dark depths” of her anatomy. (The lighting design, by Stacey Derosier, also plays off these contrasts, making subtle shifts between warm and cold accents to meet the shifts in tone, while the set design, by dots, appropriately evokes the grim, claustrophobic feeling these women have, trapped in the space.)

The play does occasionally drag in its 2 1/2-hour running time, sometimes overstating its points, as it does in Elizabeth’s more preachy monologues on gender and justice. But the twists and turns in this well-composed, self-contained drama make even the slower bits engaging.

“Welkin” is an archaic term meaning the heavens or the firmament. Though many of the characters in the play discuss the comet, the sky still seems an unfathomable notion for these confined women, who would likely be too consumed with their lives to take a moment to gaze upward. “I never look up at the sky,” one of the younger matrons says. “Not unless I’ve washing on the line.”

“The Welkin” doesn’t need to make a case for its modern-day relevance, but a few surprising anachronisms and the characters’ idle musings about how things may or may not change by the next appearance of Halley’s comet do just that.

“I do think it very queer that we know more about the movement of a comet that is thousands of miles away than the workings of a woman’s body,” Lavender says in 1759. In 2024 our cultural confusion and misconceptions about women’s bodies remain. As does our discomfort with talking about women’s bodies, especially when they tell stories of aging or decline or loss.

The next time Halley’s comet takes the stage will be 2061. “The Welkin” poses the question what will women see in the sky then? And what will we see in women?



‘The Welkin’ Through June 30 at the Linda Gross Theater, Manhattan; atlantictheater.org. Running time: 2 hours, 30 minutes.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










Today's News

June 16, 2024

Art dealers and fair organizers grapple with a roller coaster market

A Jurassic fossil and other rarities on show at Treasure House Fair

The Royal Academy of Arts opens the 256th Summer Exhibition

Dries Van Noten takes his exit

A bold Brazilian artist makes her U.S. debut, drawing on MoMA's walls

Exhibition features eleven pigment prints from Guido Mocafico's Serpens series

John Wilmerding, who helped give American art an identity, dies at 86

rodolphe janssen presents Cornelia Baltes' second show at the gallery

Bortolami announces representation of Christine Safa

The Untitled Space opens a solo exhibition of paintings by Toronto-based artist Katrina Jurjans

Kunsthal Aarhus opens 'Rhizome - Network Without Center Point'

Martin Starger, influential shaper of TV and movies, dies at 92

The Benton Museum of Art at Pomona College announces new Assistant Director for Engagement

SFMOMA announces significant leadership appointments

Tony predictions: Expect wins for 'Merrily We Roll Along' and 'Stereophonic'

Remo Saraceni, 89, dies; Inventor of the walking piano seen in 'Big'

Sunil Gupta presents a solo project in Yorkshire for the very first time

36 hours in Brooklyn, New York

Audiences are returning to the Met Opera, but not for everything

A glorious 'Titanic,' returned from the depths

It's the summer of 'brats'

Giving 'Doctor Who' a dose of emotion

'The Welkin' review: Is she guilty, pregnant or both?

A Hungarian rapper's bandwagon gets an unlikely new rider

Email Check: Revolutionizing the Way We Pay

International Vision, Diverse Cultures -Shangyu Chiang Crafts Cross-Cultural Extravaganzas to Showcase Unique Charms

Qi Yang's Masterpiece "Never Die" Sweeps International Film Festivals, Elevating Experimental Shorts to New Heights

Vibe Fine Arts: Founders Catiana Van Dinh & Zachary Pressly on Riving the VIBE of SoHo's Artistic Legacy

Are Overhead Bed Tables Adjustable and Suitable for All Bed Sizes?

What Is the Recommended Frequency for IV Therapy to Maintain Health?

Odys Global Review: The Benefits of Premium Domains for Online Success

The Advantages Of Glass Splashbacks




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful