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Theatre

Review: The Amen Corner

Praise the Lord — it’s gospel time

June 17, 2013 08:00
Sure-footed approach: Marianne Jean-Baptiste is charismatic as Sister Margaret in The Amen Corner

ByJohn Nathan, John Nathan

1 min read

The first of two plays written by the novelist and essayist James Baldwin — revived here by director Rufus Norris in a version gorgeously saturated with gospel music — was penned in the knowledge that religion was a refuge for his fellow African Americans. For them, opportunities to be anything other than an unskilled labourer were practically non-existent.

Baldwin’s heroine is single mother Sister Margaret (Marianne Jean-Baptiste), the pious preacher of the Harlem church where all the action takes place. This is where Margaret and her congregation can escape the injustices of a white-ruled world.

It is 1953. Things have changed a little since then. So the fervour of a play whose characters greet each other with “praise the Lord”, and the religiosity that has dominated Margaret’s every thought and action ever since she and her baby boy left her hard-drinking husband, come across as a pointed rebuke against blind religious faith.

In fact, The Amen Corner even serves as a particularly powerful attack on religion when it is dominated by the religious, or at least the pious. And there is no one more pious than the virginal Sister Moore (Cecilia Noble) who, as she puts it, “ain’t questioning the Lord’s way. He done kept me pure to Himself for a purpose.” In Sister Moore’s case, that purpose appears to be to replace Sister Margaret as pastor.

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