As It Is in Heaven (play)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
As It Is In Heaven
Written byArlene Hutton
Characters9 Female
Date premiered2001
Original languageEnglish
Setting1830s Shaker Community

As It Is In Heaven is a play by playwright/actor/director Arlene Hutton. It premiered at 78th Street Theater Lab,[1] followed by performances at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival and at the Off-Broadway Arclight Theatre in New York City, where it ran from January 11 to February 5, 2002. The title comes from the Shaker song "The Saviour's Universal Prayer (Our Father Who Art in Heaven)", a Shaker rendition of the Lord's Prayer.[2] The play is published by Dramatists Play Service, Inc.[3]

Background[]

Attending the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in 1995, where her first plays were produced, Hutton saw a play about Scottish female farm workers that intrigued her and inspired her to seek an American equivalent to its characters.[4] Hutton wrote the play after visiting the Pleasant Hill Shaker Village in Harrodsburg, Kentucky, a restored community that the Shakers occupied for more than a century.[4] For her play about a pre-Civil War Shaker community in which several young women claim to see celestial visions, she did three years of research.[4] One of the startling discoveries she made was that the Kentucky community whose history she was studying had contained several distant relatives of hers, with the same surname.[4]

A work with an all-female cast, As It Is in Heaven was first performed at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in 2001.[4][5] A production was scheduled to open at off-Broadway’s 78th Street Theatre Lab in New York City on September 13 of that year. Two days prior, the September 11 attacks occurred, and on that night, the cast members responded by rehearsing the Shaker hymns performed in the play. The production later opened as planned.[4] In 2008, the play was performed in Shakertown, in Pleasant Hill, Kentucky, the place that had first inspired it,[6] and it was revived in New York in 2011.[7]

Song list[]

The songs used were (as requested by the author) to be sung a cappella.

Year Type of music Song Title Author(s) Shaker Village origin
1829 Song I Never Did Believe Betsy Bates New Lebanon, New York
1835 Song Come Life, Shaker Life Issachar Bates New Lebanon, New York
1838 Song My Carnal Life I Will Lay Down South Union, Kentucky
1838 Song Come Dance And Sing Around The Ring New Lebanon, New York
1840s Song I Will Bow And Be Simple Mary Hazard New Lebanon, New York
1840s Song Who Will Bow And Bend Like A Willow Enfield, New Hampshire
1840s Hymn O Sisters Ain't You Happy Clarissa Jacobs New Lebanon, New York
1845 Hymn O Father Who Art In Heaven New Lebanon, New York
1847 Song Hop Up And Jump Up Shirley, Massachusetts
1848 Song 'Tis The Gift To Be Simple Joseph Brackett Jr. Alfred, Maine
1852 Hymn Glory Unto God We'll Sing Enfield, New Hampshire
1864 Song Come To Zion Paulina Bates New Lebanon, New York
1869 Song Welcome, Welcome Precious Gospel Kindred Enfield, New Hampshire
1870 Song Come The Fest Is Ready Canterbury, New Hampshire
1870s Hymn If Ye Love Not Each Other (More Love) Canterbury, New Hampshire

Critical reception[]

The work has been well-received by critics. Calling Hutton "one of the most richly humane voices in contemporary theater,"[8] F. Kathleen Foley of Los Angeles Times described As It Is in Heaven as “amusing, intellectually stimulating and moving – a beautifully crafted piece that will endure.”[4][8] The critic of The Village Voice, Alexis Soloski, noted that "the scenes of the women working and living together are wonderful for their very Shaker-like qualities: simplicity, unpretentiousness, attention to detail," although Soloski claims that the playwright "weaves in a dramatic arc that never seems as finely worked as the rest of the play."[1] Anita Gates in The New York Times, reviewing the New York revival, described As It Is in Heaven as a "modest, strangely moving one-act," which "is also an unexpected patchwork of high and low cultural influences," including The Age of Innocence, The Crucible and even The Book of Mormon.[7]

American Theatre Web said that "Hutton... once again looks into a slice of Americana... while showing that even a 'utopian' existence such as the Shakers' was not without complications... Hutton asks some universal questions about the nature of community and belief that are timeless and also prove to be good fodder for storytelling on stage... As It Is in Heaven contains a story that deserves to be told."[3] A review on TheaterMania.com stated that "What Hutton does that is so fascinating is to show us people who appear to be the very picture of goodness and brings out their eccentricities and frailties. [She] is excellent at drawing comedy from the situation... to its satisfying and inspiring conclusion".[3][9]

References[]

  1. ^ a b Soloski, Alexis (September 18, 2001). "No Sex, but Lots of Nice Furniture". The Village Voice. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  2. ^ "As It Is In Heaven (Play by Arlene Hutton)". www.americanmusicpreservation.com. Retrieved 25 December 2017.
  3. ^ a b c "As It is in Heaven". www.dramatists.com. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Lacher, Irene (April 2, 2003). "Shakers and angels: From unusual material, a playwright sought simplicity and larger truths". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 19 September 2018.
  5. ^ Maupin, Elizabeth (April 28, 2006). "'Accidental playwright' returns to area with 'See Rock City'". Orlando Sentinel. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  6. ^ Copley, Rich (May 25, 2008). "Play Back". Lexgo. Retrieved 19 September 2018.
  7. ^ a b Gates, Anita (May 29, 2011). "A Striking, Gentle Portrait of a Shaker Community". The New York Times. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  8. ^ a b Foley, F. Kathleen (February 28, 2003). "A blissful respite from the usual stage business". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  9. ^ Pierce, Brooke (27 September 2001). "As It Is In Heaven". theatermania.com. TheaterMania. Retrieved 17 October 2019.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""