The play is structured as a memory play, the memories being that of a Scottish nun who recently wrote a best-selling book, prompting an American reporter to visit her at the convent. She tells him that her book was inspired by a teacher she had in her youth, and we then see her story play out, with her sometimes watching on the sidelines. Miss Jean Brodie is a teacher at a private girls' school in Scotland in the '30s. But not just any teacher, she's a special teacher with her own ideas of what should be taught and how it should be taught. She focuses less on the prescribed curriculum and more on imbuing "her" girls with a sense of confidence and independence. She takes them on outings to museums, theaters, and the countryside, and favors telling romanticized stories from her past over teaching them history from books. But it's not all as rosy as it sounds. She also uses her students as pawns in her romantic entanglements with two fellow teachers, one a married man. As the girls progress through school, they remain under Miss Brodie's influence, for better or worse. She has left her mark on all of them, and some of them will pay the price.*
Allison Vincent, who's known more for comedy and physical theater, directs this drama and creates that consistent "dark an stormy" tone, with perhaps a few moments of lightness in the playfulness of the girls. They've wisely cast actual students (or recent grads) to play these students, and all four of these young women (Shayla Corteau, Jennifer Donovan, Cece Roth, and Alice Wenzlow) are so natural and believable as these precocious elementary students who grow into teenagers throughout the course of the play. Shayla has the biggest role as Sandy, a special friend of Miss Brodie (and the artist Mr. Lloyd, played by Peter Christian Hansen), more than holding her own opposite these #TCTheater vets. Sara Marsh is a great Jean Brodie, as charming and effervescent as she is devious and manipulative, so that I alternately feel sorry for her and am outraged at how she treats these "little girls." The strong cast also includes Katie Willer as the stern principal of the school at odds with Miss Brodie, Alex Galick as her charmingly awkward suitor, and in the framing story - Jackson Whitman as the American reporter and the always great Emily Grodzik as the nun who once was one of these girls. And the entire cast speaks in lovely Scottish accents (except Jackson, who sports a Southern drawl), thanks to dialect coach Keely Wolter.
Miss Brodie (Sara Marsh) and her girls (photo by Bryce Johnson) |
Miss Brodie says, "give me a girl at an impressionable age, and she is mine for life." That sounds a little bit culty, and not the most healthy relationship between a teacher and a student. A good teacher teaches students to think for themselves, not to do anything to please their teacher, as she lives vicariously through them. The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie is a bit of a cautionary tale, and a fascinating look at a complicated woman, as always well done by Dark and Stormy Productions.
*Plot summary borrowed from my review of Theatre in the Round's 2015 production.