Saturday, 8 July 2023

Coffee with Caiaphas - The Chester Mystery Plays 2023

The Mystery Plays tapestry quilt by B.J.Elvgren, displayed in Chester Cathedral

I once met a nun who felt called to a cloistered life after being captivated by the musical Godspell as a teenager. I confess that I too find dramatic representations of the Passion of Christ encountered outside of the liturgy of the church to be particularly powerful. One of the most arresting such experiences has been watching the Mystery Plays

 

In July we saw friends perform in the latest production of the Chester cycle, which today is the largest regularly produced community theatre event in the UK, performed by unpaid volunteers. This near complete cycle of plays owes its existence to the wealth of the medieval guilds who popularised their production by moving performances onto carts in the streets and preserving most of the scripts in the homes of members and their descendants after the plays were prohibited in 1575.

 

It is said that the original set of twenty four plays covering scenes from the Creation to the Last Judgement were divided between the guilds - Grocers, Bakers and Millers performing the Last Supper, the Ironmongers in charge of The Crucifixion scene. 

 

Some suggest that today the plays are named as a result of this connection to the lives of working people - based on evidence that ‘mystery’ - derived from the Latin ministerium - was used by some guilds to describe their crafts

 

Generating such a connection for the audience was a key objective for this year’s director John Young, who eschewed recent thematic staging and design (evocatively deployed in the 2018 production which focussed on creation care) seeking to capture the immediacy of medieval street theatre - an aim that he achieved with aplomb.  

 

The audience, rather than the performers are now raised and face each other either side of a central “street” in the nave of Chester Cathedral. This is close enough to Cain’s face to encounter his change in ‘countenance’ (as the King James Version puts it) in Play Three (Genesis 4.5) and discern individual drops of ‘blood’ from the hands of the wailing mothers after cradling the bodies of their innocent sons murdered by Herod (Matthew 2.16) in Play Seven. The close proximity allows for ad-libbed audience interaction by the three comical shepherds  (Play Six).

 

In sensing that the staging adds a binary flavour to the performance, I think Mark Fisher, writing in The Guardian,overlooks the inherent symmetry - with Christ at the centre of the entire production (players and audience alike reflecting from him). 

 

Even when Christ is physically absent, such as in the early plays focussing on creation (which cleverly accentuate the symmetry of the first creation account in Genesis in the dialogue between the two actors playing God), Christ’s presence is felt; the tree of life placed in the same location as the cross, referencing a tradition that the timber is one and the same. Christ comes to stand alongside the other two ‘persons’ of God after his Ascension into heaven (Play 16). 

 

Fisher notes that the seating means we “never lose sight of being an audience”. Our proximity ensured everyone opposite could see my tears - as I could see theirs.

 

Like their medieval counterparts, performers in the revival plays, which began in the fifties and are staged in Chester every five years, find their lives become intertwined with the story of the Passion. 

 

Our friends are the latest generation of their family to take part in the play - our goddaughter, her brother and their father, who played Lazarus. Sacrifices had to be made to fit school, work and family life around the rigorous rehearsal and performance schedule, which lasted several months. We were grateful that they were able to spend the morning with us before preparing for the matinee performance. 

 

Walking around the City centre, we saw Joseph helping a lady down some steps from the shops. After having lunch with Lazarus and his family we said hello to Caiaphas who was having coffee on the next table (who we recognised as Mrs Noah from a previous production). 

 

Encountering these “characters” as they went about their daily business was a powerful reminder that all our lives are bound by the living Word of the greatest story ever told. The symmetry in John Young’s clever production of the 2023 Chester Mystery Play helps us to remember that whoever we encounter today – whether coffee with Caiaphas or with a close friend – Jesus is the ever-present point of reflection between us, whose image we reflect. 

Image : The Mystery Plays tapestry quilt by B.J. Elvgren 

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