Entering the theater about ten minutes prior to showtime, the powerhouse three-person cast (Aimee K. Bryant, Nubia Monks, and Essence Renae) is already on stage. The stage in this case being a raised circular platform covered in brown shag carpet, surrounded by a curtain of thin clear filaments like a veil. We watch the three women as they center themselves, arrange their head wraps, and check out each other's work. Then the ritual begins. Playwright AriDy Nox has written the piece in a playful fourth-wall breaking way, cleverly switching back and forth between the three godlings talking to us, and scenes of three different groups of Black women - two sisters and the spirit of their mother, three friends at a wedding shower, and two newlyweds with a disapproving aunt. The godlings step into and out of the scenes, trying to get it right, but human relationships are messy and things get complicated. That's where they ask for our help (in an easy non-threatening way).
Aimee K. Bryant, Nubia Monks, and Essence Renae (photo by Bruce Silcox) |
Seeing a show at Pillsbury House + Theatre is always about more than just theater (if you're curious about the + in their name, listen to our interview with Signe V. Harriday, Senior Artistic Producing Director, along with Suzy Messerole, Co-Artistic Director of Exposed Brick Theatre, at the time their co-production of Passage last year). Don't get me wrong, they make great theater that's entertaining and engaging and thoughtfully designed, but there's something deeper. This piece feels light and happy and healing, a communal experience toward greater understanding of what it is to be human, a full and rich experience despite the relative short runtime.
I'll leave you with a few words from the director:
This play speaks to the very reasons why I make theatre. In A Walless Church, Nox’s godlings have heard the longings of Black women who deeply want to see god and return to a knowing of the god within. Their rituals invite us into contemplation about how we navigate healing in our relationships when hurt, pain, and misunderstanding drive us apart. Part recipe making, part experimentation, part discovery – A Walless Church evokes transformation and the spirit of healing.