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| Linda Bassett. Photo: Johan Persson |
By Rob Weinert-Kendt
“And I only am escaped alone to tell thee,” a line from the Book of Job that Melville used to begin his epilogue to
Moby-Dick, hovers questioningly over Caryl Churchill’s new play
Escaped Alone, which opened a year ago at London’s Royal Court Theatre and
comes to BAM’s Harvey Theater from February 15 to 26. Does Churchill’s title refer to Mrs. Jarrett, played by Linda Bassett, who for roughly half the play’s 50-minute running time stands in abstractly framed darkness downstage, coolly describing a series of ecological and social disasters that only she seems to have lived to tell about?
According to the play’s director, James Macdonald, the title may also suggest a more general state of being and nothingness among a quartet of women, including Mrs. Jarrett, who are seen in the play’s other half chatting amiably, if often at cross purposes, in a sunny backyard.