The Rimers of Eldritch

The Rimers of Eldritch
Written by Lanford Wilson
Characters Robert Conklin
Eva Jackson
Skelly Mannor
Evelyn Jackson
Nelly Windrod
Mary Windrod
Patsy Johnson
Mavis Johnson
Peck Johnson
Josh Johnson
Lena Truit
Martha Truit
Wilma Atkins
Cora Graves
Walter
Preacher/Judge
Trucker
Date premiered July 13, 1966
Place premiered La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club
New York City
Original language English
Subject A murder trial in a decaying Missouri town
Genre Drama
Setting Eldritch, Missouri

The Rimers of Eldritch is a play by Lanford Wilson. Set in the mid-20th century in Eldritch, Missouri, a decaying Bible Belt town that once was a prosperous coal mining community, it focuses on the murder of the aging local hermit (Skelly Mannor) by a woman (Nelly Windrod) who mistakenly thought he was committing rape when he actually was trying to prevent one.

Productions

The play premiered at the La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club in July 1966.[1] The play, directed by Michael Kahn opened Off-Broadway at the Cherry Lane Theatre on February 20, 1967, where it ran for 32 performances. The cast included Dena Dietrich, Don Scardino, Helen Stenborg, Susan Tyrrell, and Bette Henritze, who won the Obie Award for Distinguished Performance.[2]

Wilson adapted his play for a television movie broadcast by PBS as the first episode of its Great Performances series on November 4, 1972.[3] Directed by Davey Marlin-Jones, it stars Roberts Blossom, Susan Sarandon, Rue McClanahan, K Callan, Will Hare, Kate Harrington, Frances Sternhagen, and Ernest Thompson. It was later broadcast on PBS on March 20, 1974.[4]

Mark Brokaw directed a revival at the Second Stage Theatre that opened on November 8, 1988 and ran for 43 performances. The cast included William Mesnik, Adam Storke, and Amy Ryan.[5] In reviewing the production for the New York Times, Mel Gussow cited the playwright's "sensitivity and his gift for language." [6]

Critical reception

Howard Thompson reviewed the television movie for The New York Times. He noted that "as a TV drama, it has a good cast, an astute director in Davey Marlin-Jones, and an authenticity of background.... the action is cluttered with a confusion of bits and pieces and even scenes that jump to the past and the future....Mr. Marlin-Jones, with the plot edging forward, handles some scenes beautifully as in one gossipy exchange between two uneasy women, Sarah Cummingham and Helen Stenborg."[7]

References

  1. "La Mama archives" lamama.org
  2. "1967 production" Lortel.org
  3. tc.pbs.org
  4. "Theater In America: 'The Rimers of Eldritch' (TV)" paleycenter.org, accessed January 15, 2016
  5. 1988 production at the Lortel Archives
  6. Gussow, Mel. "Theater review" New York Times, December 1, 1988
  7. Thompson, Howars. "TV: All About Elections: Adults Can Learn from Children's Show on C.B.S. Narrated by Cronkite", The New York Times, November 4, 1972. p. 67, ISSN 0362-4331
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