Tuesday, August 11, 2020

275. JOAN. From my (unpublished) ENCYCLOPEDIA OF THE NEW YORK STAGE, 1970-1975


Lee Guilliatt and cast of Joani.

JOAN [Musical/Law/Politics/Prison/Religion/Youth] B/M/LY/D: Al Carmines; S/L: Earl Rodman; C: Ira Siff, Joan Kilpatrick; CH: Gus Solomons, Jr.; P: Circle in the Square; T: Circle in the Square (OB); 6/19/72-8/13/72 (64)

Margaret Wright, Lee Guilliatt.

Al Carmines, pastor of Greenwich Village’s Judson Memorial Church and prolific composer-writer of tuneful, energetic, campy Off-Off Broadway musicals, wrote, directed, composed, and played piano for this Off-Broadway transfer of his updated Joan of Arc musical.

The Joan of the title (Lee Guilliatt) is based on the medieval Maid of Orleans, but Carmines transmogrifies her into a mannish East Village, jeans and sneaker-clad, bomb-throwing radical, raised in the Midwest in a mixed Jewish and Presbyterian family. She lives in an Avenue B flat with two unkempt male roommates, one of them a junky (Ira Siff). Wandering the East Village streets she meets the tacky, platinum-blonde, miniskirted Virgin Mary (Essie Borden), which leads Joan to find her personal brand of religious faith.

She is betrayed by the junky and ends up in the Women’s House of Detention on Sixth Avenue where, following the orgasmic release of masturbation, and accompanied by a Hallelujah gospel chorus, she is taken away to be executed. This turn of events turns her mother (Emily Adams) into a revolutionary. Along the way, fun is poked at organized religion, psychiatry, politics, radical lawyers, morality, the penal system, and other institutions.

Critical reactions were strikingly mixed, but most leaned toward favoring the show. Edith Oliver called it a completely successful fusion of Carmine’s musical, emotional, comedic, inventive talents, “and above all, his rebellious, emboldened spirit.” Douglas Watt, however, was less admiring of Carmines’s musical quality: “He really can’t write music, has no talent for it nor the slightest trace of originality.” Even those who liked the show berated its weak book, amateurish acting, and sophomoric humor. John Simon simply burned the show at the stake as a “self-serving, . . . melodically derivative and barren, pseudo-religious, but genuinely polymorphous-perverse musicalization of the” old legend.

Interestingly, a production in Boston not long afterward, directed by Larry Loonin, received glowing reviews.