Daddy’s girl

Mabou Mines looks into James Joyce’s daughter
By IRIS FANGER  |  June 5, 2007
inside_lucias
Ruth Maleczech as Lucia Joyce

Repressed, talented women lurk in the background of Western cultural history — think of Alice James and Fanny Mendelssohn. But in the case of Lucia Joyce, the difficult daughter of James Joyce, the circumstances turned darker. At age 28, artist and dancer Lucia (1907–1982) was incarcerated in a mental institution. She remained there for the rest of her life.

Next weekend, Charlestown Working Theater hosts Mabou Mines, the acclaimed New York experimental theater company, in Lucia’s Chapters of Coming Forth by Day, which explores the ties between Joyce and his daughter. Melrose High and Emerson College grad Sharon Fogarty wrote the script and directs; founding co-artistic director and three-time Obie winner Ruth Maleczech plays Lucia. “Lucia was an independent spirit,” says Maleczech, “but there was something awry there. Had she lived now, she probably would have been out in the world. We have better drugs.”

“We wrestled with the question of what her father really felt about her,” says Fogarty. “James and his wife, Nora, were ill-equipped to be parents. James neglected the family, yet he used them in his imagination in his works.”

The first version of Fogarty’s script, the 2003 Cara Lucia, had a trio of actresses alternating as Lucia. Explains Maleczech, “One actress played her as a young woman and a dancer; the second as Issy, a character from Finnegans Wake. I played her later in life, after she had been institutionalized for many years. She was an inspiration for her father when he was writing Finnegans Wake. She had a peculiar way of writing and speaking, using ‘portmanteau’ words — words that are coupled together but don’t belong together — to make one word. We think she was instrumental in exposing Joyce to that and inspirational in terms of his affection for her.”

In the piece, Lucia is confined to a chair; Joyce is personified as a dark shadow, hanging over most of the play before he comes on at the end. “In our story, she’s already dead, trying to move into the hereafter,” says Fogarty. “Her father helps her to move into the light.”

Maleczech adds, “She’s in an imprisoned place. That speaks to people of an unnatural isolation, [but it’s] true to her life. And it was true for Joyce, but for different reasons. When Joyce took Lucia to Jung, in hopes of curing her, Jung said, ‘It’s like they both are sinking to the bottom, only he is diving and she is drowning.’ The implication being that Joyce knew how to surface. And it’s what ties them together, in the water going down, down, down.”

Lucia’s Chapters of Coming Forth by Day | Mabou Mines | Charlestown Working Theater, 442 Bunker Hill St, Charlestown | June 14-16 | $20; $15 seniors, students | 866.811.4111

On the Web
Charlestown Working Theater: www.charlestownworkingtheater.org

Related: The best on the boards, Couples, Indie bands are better than groundhogs, More more >
  Topics: Theater , Emerson College, James Joyce, Ruth Maleczech,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY IRIS FANGER
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   BODY POLITIC  |  September 02, 2008
    Anna Deavere Smith is a writer/actor/activist who listens.
  •   KOSHER COMIC  |  December 10, 2007
    Judy Gold sashays into a press conference with a white apron over her jeans and a tray of rugelach in her hand.
  •   CHRISTMAS IN CROATIA  |  December 09, 2007
    “If there are 1100 people in the audience,” Swanson reminds me, “around 600-700 of them will dance out into the Sanders lobby at intermission.”
  •   AFTER GODOT  |  November 06, 2007
    It’s fitting that Alvin Epstein should be cast in Beckett at 100 , since the venerable actor has been associated with the Nobel laureate’s plays for more than 50 years.
  •   THEATER OF WAR  |  October 31, 2007
    Director Scott Ellis doesn’t call David Rabe’s Streamers a play about war.

 See all articles by: IRIS FANGER