
Mother-daughter relationships are somehow deemed different. More seminal than the bond between a father and son. More instinctive than between sisters. When trust is broken, all bets can certainly be off. But that doesn’t seem to be the case for Thelma and Jesse, a mom and her daughter who live together in Marsha Norman’s magnificent ‘night Mother, just opening at Redtwist Theatre in Edgewater. They have a balance and flow that suggests a seasoned understanding. A harmonic acceptance of their lives together.
Thelma, played so fully by Redtwist ensemble member, Kathy Ruhl, is a pleasing mix of pragmatism and discreet earnestness. A woman who’s lived a long life, withstood a lot and is making the most of the years in her final season. Knitting on her well-cushioned sofa, cell phone dangling from her lanyard, TV playing in the background, she’s thinking about how she’s going to satisfy her sugar fix. And settles on a snowball before contemplating many other options as the evening passes.
Thanks to the prodigious thought and scrupulous detail Bobbie Buie poured into the set design, Thelma’s modest home has the soft glow of easy unpretentious comfort. Everywhere there are signs that point to a contentment that’s been well earned. The world she created, along with Harper Justus’s precise and subtle sound design, saturated you in place.
Anne Sheridan Smith in the role of her daughter, Jesse, is much more wired; frenzied in an organized way. When she shoots out of her bedroom door, she’s clearly a woman on a mission to get a lot of things done. Quickly. As she settles down, she’s simply determinedly methodical and impressively so. There’s some light haggling with her mother. It seems like something they just occasionally do. Normal. Tonight, giving her mother a manicure is high on Jesse’s to do list. It’s not long before they settle down at the kitchen table and normal goes away.
A small cloud of foreboding drifted in when Jesse began looking for some things in their makeshift attic. One of them is a gun. When her mother keeps pressing her on why she wants or needs one, she forces her daughter’s hand. Jesse declares to her mother, not coldly but matter-of-factly, that tonight she’s going to use it to kill herself.
It’s the kind of statement that instantly triggers incredulity. And automatically, by reflex, Thelma’s “mom” response zooms past tilt. Even though she may not initially believe Jesse, she hears her. And intuitively she wants to fix it as she struggles to even comprehend the magnitude of what she’s been told. ‘night Mother soon becomes a push and pull with Jesse always exhibiting the greater strength against a formidable opponent. She has the inner conviction to see this grim task through. You can sense that when she first told her mother what she was going to do. Like her mother, we too want to know why.
A dissection of one person’s why is what this intricate and intimate story is all about. And the way Smith inhabits her character, she functions as an outstandingly plausible stand-in for many of us. People who not only have had enough but also look at themselves and don’t see enough.
Her mother doesn’t really understand. Not at first. It’s as the tandem airing of their lives that reveals how it’s come to this.
Well into this gripping one act performance, wonderfully directed by Redtwist’s Artistic Director, Dusty Brown, Thelma describes herself as a “plain country woman”. Life for her is something you just did. It’s the kind of existence where naivete and ignorance may thrive in abundance, but neither carries an especially detrimental cost. When it came to Jesse’s early childhood rearing of Jesse though, perhaps it did. Thelma and her husband discovered late in their daughter’s development that the fits she experienced as a child were epileptic. Undiagnosed and untreated for far too long, Jesse internalized them as manifestations of a personal flaw. A flaw that inevitably, in her mind, produced terrible consequences.
She never directly states it, but it’s clear she blames herself for the way her son, Ricky, is turning out. A thief, drugs, regularly in run-ins with the police. Thelma says it’s just a phase. He’ll grow out if it and be a “fine young man”. But through a haze that’s draped in quiet anguish, Jesse senses otherwise. It’s the same with her ex-husband. In Cecil’s case, he was there and then he was gone. The man her mother found for her, who she came to love and who chose not to stay.
They’re all hard blows. Jesse has weathered them. Now it sounds like she’s tired. Sick of it all. Living with her mother. Lonely present. Lonely future. She’s felt this way for so long that she’s used the last 10 years to plan for this night. She’s gotten it so fine-tuned, she can give her mother detailed instructions on who to call when after the deed is done, and why.
For this compassionate plunge into the unthinkable, Marsha Norman won the Pulitzer Prize for drama in 1983. A native of Kentucky, you can hear a faint sound of the south in the way Thelma and Jesse talk to one another. The weight of the subject matter, the care in which these two women are drawn and portrayed, the way every argument Thelma raises against this tragic decision is rebuffed by unswayable conviction, keeps you rapt. A sliver of life captured beautifully and unforgettably on the stage.
‘night Mother
Through May 24, 2026
Redtwist Theatre
1044 W. Bryn Mawr Ave.
Chicago, IL 60660
For tickets and more information: https://www.redtwisttheatre.org
Highly Recommended
This review is proudly shared with our friends at www.TheatreInChicago.com.
Drury Lane brings Alice Walker’ 1982 novel ‘The Color Purple’, which found major success as a film in 1985, to the stage in what is sure to be a memorable experience for theatre goers. After its opening night performance, many who had seen either the Broadway run or national touring version of the classic story, emphatically stated that Drury Lane’s production is the best they have ever seen. That’s saying something.
The story takes place in the early 1900’s and continues through about halfway through the century. Following the journey of Celie, an African American woman in the American South, we get a story of heartbreak, unspeakable atrocities and more importantly that of hope and perseverance. Still a child, Celie has two children by the age of fourteen – both by her father, Alphonso. Not long after her second child is born; her father tells Celie he is going to get rid of the child just like he did with the first. Celie’s only comfort is in spending time with her slightly older sister Nettie and the two vow to never leave each other’s side.
But four years later, a local farmer, Albert “Mister” Johnson asks Alphonso to have Nettie’s hand in marriage. Alphonso refuses, but offers up Celie instead, who is constantly referred to as “ugly”. Mister doesn’t bite but finally accepts when Alphonso throws in a cow. Mister, who had helped Nettie pursue her dream of becoming a teacher, also takes Nettie in shortly after she pleaded to stay with him and her sister alleging Alphonso is mistreating her. Mister accommodates Nettie, but always having eyes for her, attacks her one day and when she fights back is sent away along with the promise the two sisters will never see each other again. Once again, Celie finds herself in what turns out to be abusive relationship with a much older man.
It seems hopeless for Celie until a racy lounge singer comes into their lives – Shug Avery.
From there the story takes on many directions and we wonder if Celie will ever see her sister again or be released from the clutches of Mister.
With an already powerful book by Marsha Norman and music and lyrics by Brenda Russell, Allee Willis and Stephen Bray, the direction by Lili-Anne Brown and gifted cast assembled puts this production over the top. Eben K. Logan is stupendous as Celie in every way as we are hopelessly drawn into her character one moment and marveling at her vocal ability the next. Logan is a true find and leads this amazing cast that also features Sydney Charles who brightly shines as Shug Avery, Nicole Michelle Haskins whose moving portrayal of Sofia truly resonates and Melvin Abston who is nothing short of commanding as Mister. The cast rounds out with an incredibly skilled ensemble that features Drury veterans Adhana Reid and Lorenzo Rush Jr. along with Camille Robinson, Jos N. Banks and a host of other talents. Kyrie Courter is just wonderful as Nettie while Gilbert Domally’s Harpo couldn’t be better.
Besides a powerful story that is sure to move its audience members, it contains one enjoyable musical number after another from its title song “The Color Purple” to touching numbers like “What About Love” and “Somebody Gonna Love you”.
Drury Lane’s ‘The Color Purple’ is engaging from beginning to end as it retells a classic story of strong will and courage.
Highly recommended.
‘The Color Purple’ is being performed at Drury Lane Theatre in Oakbrook through November 3rd. For tickets and/or more information, visit www.drurylanetheatre.com.
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