The New York-based Irish actress Katherine O'Sullivan appears in "The Holy Ground," Dermot Bolger's haunting one-woman memory play, as part of this year's 1st Irish Festival. Directed by Don Creedon, "The Holy Ground" runs from September 13 to September 25 at the Manhattan Theatre Source, 177 MacDougal Street, in the West Village. This is "The Holy Ground's" professional U.S. premiere. First produced by the Gate Theatre in Dublin in 1990, it was originally paired with another Bolger play, "In High Germany."
With bittersweet humor, Monica, a recent widow, tries to come to terms with the sadness of her marriage to a man who couldn't give her children. Unable to face the stigma of being a childless couple in post-colonial Catholic Ireland, Monica's husband, Myles, grows increasingly cruel and distant, rejecting her physically and emotionally. Now, as she empties the house of his papers and possessions, Monica relives their lives together, a life that began with such tender promise. With heart-rending honesty, she recounts the pain and confusion, the long empty years of loneliness and, in a chilling finale, her own tragic act of desperation. But how will she live her life from now on? Will she be able to loosen the grip of ideological rigor mortis? What identity, if any, can she forge for herself?With his often-elliptical wit Bolger manages to make the play's stultifying marriage stand for much more than a domestic sorry tale. A metaphor for Ireland itself and for what it means to be Irish, "The Holy Ground" sheds ironic light on such traditional virtues as staying in place, maintaining traditions, and holding fast to certain religious beliefs. In the course of the one-hour play Bolger deconstructs the nationalist myth of the submissive, suffering, maternal Irish woman.Videos