“The Mysterious Mother” Walpolooza

July 20, 2018
three adults in costume with scripts
The final event for the year-long Walpolooza celebration  featured a staged reading of and mini-conference on Walpole’s play The Mysterious Mother. 
 
On May 2nd, an enthusiastic audience filled the lecture hall at the Yale Center for British Art for the first known north-American performance of Horace Walpole’s The Mysterious Mother (1768). Walpole’s play is a gothic dramatic counterpart to his more famous gothic novel, The Castle of Otranto (1764). This under-appreciated tragedy of incest and intrigue was initially circulated only among the author’s friends. Walpole never permitted it to be performed during his lifetime except as a private theatrical event.
 
Cast curtain call for Mysterious Mother at Yale
 
Our staged reading was directed by Misty G. Anderson, Lindsay Young Professor of English, University of Tennessee, based on an abridged script by David Worrall, Emeritus Professor of English at Nottingham Trent University. The titular lead was played by Georgina Lock, Senior Lecturer, School of Arts & Humanities, Nottingham Trent University who we have determined was only the fourth to play the countess. Other actors were drawn mainly from alumn of the library’s fellowship program together with other Yale-affiliated students and scholars: Dale Townshend, Professor of Gothic Studies, Manchester Metropolitan University played Peter, the Porter; Chelsea Phillips, Assistant Professor of Theater, Villanova University played, Adeliza; Count Edmund and his friend Florian were played by Carlos Guanche, Yale TC ’20 and Gilberto Saenz, Yale ES ’19; the Friars Benedict and Martin were played by Charlie Gillespie, Doctoral Candidate in Religious Studies, University of Virginia and Justin Crisp, Doctoral Candidate in Religious Studies, Yale University; the Servant was played by Stephen Clarke, Independent Scholar and Board of Managers, The Lewis Walpole Library. Jill Campbell read the Prologue and Misty Anderson read the Epilogue which Walpole had written for the actress Kitty Clive. The extraordinary renaissance period costumes, chosen in keeping with the celebrated illustrations by Walpole’s friend Lady Diana Beauclerk, came from Hartford Stage and the Goodspeed Opera, including the stunning purple costume worn by Gilberto as Florian which had been worn by Nathan Lane. The mood-evoking digital set was designed by Alice Trent, Candidate for Master of Fine Arts in Lighting Design, University of Tennessee. 
 
Adults seated around table with papers in front of them                                        Young man in elaborate purple costume                      two men in costume in front of a projected scene of a castle in fog
 
The cast gathered with Misty at the library in Farmington for two short days of intense rehearsal culminating in a performance that was a resounding success. It was both highly engaging as entertainment and tremendously revelatory on the complexities of the stage-ability of The Mysterious Mother and more generally for performance scholarship.
 
Group of adults seated ni semi-circle
 
Catherine Sheehy, Professor of the Practice of Dramaturgy and Dramatic Criticism, Yale University, lead a lively talk back with actors and the audience following the performance.
 
group of adults seated in semi-circle looking at one woman who is speaking
 
A mini-conference organized by the library’s Curator of Prints, Drawings and Paintings Cynthia Roman and Yale Professor of English Jill Campbell followed on May 3rd. In two panels, speakers explored aspects of reading and staging The Mysterious Mother. A morning panel on “Reading The Mysterious Mother” chaired by Jill Campbell, included papers by Dale Townshend, Professor of Gothic Literature, Manchester Metropolitan University (“The Mystery of The Mysterious Mother: Textual Lives and Afterlives”); Matthew Reeve, Associate Professor, Art History, Queen’s University (“The Mysterious Mother and Crypto-Catholicism in the Circle of Horace Walpole”); Nicole Garret, Lecturer, Department of English, SUNY Stony Brook (“Mis-reading in The Mysterious Mother”); Cheryl Nixon, Associate Professor, Department of English, University of Massachusetts, Boston (“The Mysterious Orphan: Dramatizing the Betrayal of the Child”); and Nicole Wright, Assistant Professor of English, University of Colorado, Boulder (“‘Kindest Laws:’ Intimate Adjudication in The Mysterious Mother”). 
 
In the afternoon, Misty Anderson chaired a second panel on “Staging The Mysterious Mother.” Speakers included Marcie Frank, Professor of English, Concordia University (“Wilful Walpole: Performing Publication and The Mysterious Mother”); Jean Marsden, Professor of English, University of Connecticut (“Family Dramas: The Mysterious Mother and the Eighteenth-Century Incest Play”); Al Coppola, Associate Professor of English, John Jay College, CUNY (“Spectacles of Science and Superstition”); Judith Hawley, Professor of English, Royal Holloway, University of London (“‘the beautiful negligence of a gentleman:’ Horace Walpole and Amateur Theatricals”) and David Worrall, Professor Emeritus, Nottingham Trent University (“‘I beg you would keep it under lock and key:’ The Mystery of the 1821 Mysterious Mother Performances”).
 
Group of adults standing around table on which books, easels and prints are displayed
 
During the midday break, Cynthia Roman led a break-out session for attendants and participants with the library’s set of six illustrations by Lady Diana Beauclerk that Walpole displayed in a purpose-built closet in the Round Tower at Strawberry Hill and a number of annotated and manuscript copies of the play. 
 
For anyone who missed these events or would like to see them again, both the performance and mini-conference were recorded and can be viewed on YouTube: