GLORIFYING THE HUMAN SPIRIT
QUO VADIS DRAMA TELLS OF TRIUMPH
OF ALTRUISM OVER ALCOHOLISM
NORA VILLAGRÁN, Mercury News Staff Writer
IN THIS era of cinematic violence and TV trash talk, San Jose’s Quo Vadis Theatre Company offers audiences something unusual
A Catholic theater company, Quo Vadis aims to produce family-oriented plays with moral messages and universal appeal.
”Stories about inspiring, courageous people can help mold minds and shape character in positive ways,” says playwright Cathal Gallagher, one of the company’s founders. ”I believe audiences want to see what is noble in human beings, rather than what is destructive. The Judeo-Christian ethic is being replaced by the ‘Jerry Springer Show.’ We, as artists, have a responsibility to put on plays that enrich and ennoble the human spirit.”
With these goals, the company is presenting Gallagher’s new play, ”A Fiddler in Granby Lane,” based on the life of Matt Talbot, an alcoholic in Dublin, Ireland, at the turn of the century who strove to overcome his fierce addiction through faith and service to others. The production opens Wednesday at the Sunnyvale Community Center and continues through May 29.
”Fiddler” is the second production for the company, co-founded in 1995 by Gallagher and run by volunteers.
In the drama, Talbot helps steal a violin from a fiddler to sell for drinking money. Later, filled with remorse, he seeks out the musician to repay him. The story explores the roles of conscience and restitution in redemption from past transgressions. Talbot serves as a role model for how one can escape alcoholism or other human downfalls.
Family Focus
It’s a play, says assistant director Pat Cross, that ”goes beyond religion. Even at the lowest rung, you can bring your life around.” It’s a play parents can see with their teenagers, who may be facing adolescent temptations, adds Cross, 52.
”Matt Talbot’s life revolved around alcohol from the age of 13,” she says. ”But at 28, he made a dramatic change and went on to help and positively influence others. Long before AA and self-help programs, he did this with his own faith and determination.”
The cast, directed by Rick Frank, features Michael Kane, Mary Elizabeth O’Connor, Sinead Mahoney, Karie Vaughan, Ted Hatrak, Paula Mahoney, Joe Parks, Todd O’Donnell, Dan O’Connell and Mark Lynch as Talbot.