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Ritual Imports: Performing Medieval Drama in America. By Claire
Sponsler. Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press, 2004. Pp. viii
+ 235. $35.
Who knew? Less than a decade after the construction of the first modern
theatre building (The Theatre of Southwark, 1576), an Englishman bound
for the wilds of Newfoundland found room in his luggage for the equipment
needed to perform mumming plays and May games for the savages and settlers
of colonial Canada. At the same time, the Pueblo people of New Mexico
were performing the matachines dances that continued to dramatize and
contest the conquest of Mexico well into the twentieth century. Now the
blandly seasonal Tulip Fest, the Pinkster Festival of Albany began as
Pfingsten, a Pentecostal celebration of Dutch origin that metamorphosed
into a celebration of African American culture in the decades leading
up to the Civil War. During the charged decades after that war, in the
midst of movements to end the slavery of low-wage laborers, newspaper
coverage of Philadelphia's controversial New Year's revels helped to transform
displays of masked banditry into well-regulated community revels. Simultaneously,
theatrical entrepreneurs in America's heartland capitalized on popular
accounts of the Passion Play at Oberammergau by mounting successful
spectacles of quasi-medieval piety that influenced, directly and indirectly,
the fortunes of commercial theatre in the twentieth century (one of these
launched the career of an actor called James O'Neill, father of America's
first major playwright). In the Williamsburg neighborhood of Brooklyn,
some 250 men still participate in the annual raising of the giglio,
a gigantic metal and papier-mâché monument honoring the miraculous
deeds of St. Paulinus of Nola, which is carried aloft in a ritual based
on the increasingly distant customs of medieval Italy. Meanwhile, college
campuses in both the United States and Canada regularly provide the venues
in which North American academics strive to recreate the sights and sounds
of medieval drama, in the name of intellectual inquiry.
Carol Symes
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
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