Reviewed by James Karas
“OH, MARY!” by Cole Escola is ostensibly a play about Mary Todd Lincoln, the wife of the great president. It has nothing to do with her life but instead is an overrated farce that relies on grotesque and non-stop overacting. It is now playing at the Trafalgar Theatre in London.
Mary (Mason Alexander Park - yes she is played by a man ) bursts onto the stage, clearly deranged and frantically looking for her bottle of booze. She screams and screeches and is out of her mind. Her long skirt flies above her knees showing that she is wearing polka dot underwear. We will see them many times.
Lincoln appears and tells her that there is a war on and the country is fighting the south. “The south what? asks Mary. It is a decent line that does not bear repeating but it is repeated. Everyone overacts to the point of being tiresome and humour the is forced to the limit.
An officer described as Mary’s husband’s assistant in the program (Oliver
Stockley) bends over in front of Lincoln and the latter is ready to hump him. A
bit later we will see Lincoln invoking his deity and his assistant will emerge from under his desk and we know exactly what he was
doing. He tells us about sperm to make sure we know that he was fellate the president.
Mary wants to be a cabaret singer for which she has no talent. Lincoln hires a tutor to teach her to become an actor. His intention is to keep her away from the bottle and his choice is a second-rate actor called John Wilkes Booth (Dino Fetscher). Yes, that one.
In a note in the program, author Escola and director Sam Pinkleton explain that they took a “seemingly stupid idea” about Mary Lincoln wanting to become a cabaret star and treat it with “the utmost care and sincerity” and bombard us with jokes and plot twists and leave us surprised. What we get is overdone farce, repeated jokes that are not funny and, I say it again, overacting that I cannot believe is allowed in the West End and presumably did well on Broadway.
Except for a scene in a theatre where Lincoln is assassinated by Mary (surprise) with Booth and a cabaret where Mary sings shortly after the assignation, the set design by dots shows a desk and a sofa. The gaudy costumes for Mary and her chaperone are by Holly Pierson.
A comment about audience reaction is necessary. Although many of us sat in stunned silence watching this unbelievable production, most people found it hilarious. The raunchy bits were greeted with howls of laughter and the reaction at curtain call was enthusiastic.






