The
story opens rather ominously. A body has been found in a bog; the man had been
missing for 10 years. It’s clear that he had been executed – his hands had been
bound behind his back and he was shot in the back of the head. Two men attempt
to convince, and then successfully threaten, a Catholic priest, to convince the
man’s older brother to let the death be.
Switch
scenes to a farmhouse early on the day of harvest in 1981. The Carney family is
waking up, and it is a large and extended family. Quinn Carney is the family
head; he and his wife Mary have seven children, stretching from the teens to a
baby. Living with them is Quinn’s sister-in-law Caitlyn and her son Oisin;
Caitlyn’s husband disappeared 10 years before, although periodic rumors report
sightings of him in Ireland and England.
The
family includes three aging relatives – Aunt Maggie, afflicted with dementia;
Uncle Patrick, who likes his liquor; and Aunt Patricia, who is rather
sardonically funny and lives to hate Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher.
This
is Northern Ireland. It is the Time of Troubles, the Irish Republican Army, and
random and not-so-random violence. And what looks to be a happy, loud, and
somewhat raucous family will discover the violence of politics and the politics
of violence rearing their heads.
This
is the story of The Ferryman by British playwright Jez Butterworth. It’s a moving
story, and a disturbing story. It is also a story that, while it may be about
Northern Ireland and the IRA in 1981, it is also a story very much with us
today, in this age of extremist politics, protest, division, and anger. And
this is true for both reading the play and seeing it performed.
As
such, the play can be considered a warning against what happens to the family when
politics and violence fuse together.
Jez Butterworth |
Butterworth
is one of Britain’s leading playwrights, and the author of several previous
plays, including Jerusalem,
Mojo,
The
River, The
Night Heron, Parlour
Song, and The
Winterling. The Ferryman
debuted in April in London and is currently playing at the Gielgud Theatre.
The
minor character of Aunt Pat is a critical one to the story. She not only
directly introduces the edge of politics into the play; she also represents the
longstanding bitterness and anger against the English that fueled so much of
the IRA’s activities.
But
it is the character of Quinn Carney that is the critical one. He’s a man in
love with his sister-in-law and not his invalid wife; he restrains himself
politically and focuses on his managing his farm. But he also has a past as a
former IRA soldier. And as the growing shadows gather around Quinn and his
family, the question becomes what he will do.
The
Ferryman is a hard story, but a story that needs to be told. And read.
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