Still Changing Lives…
It’s Getting Hot, Hot, Hot…
Sunday (5/21/23) show Annie Lanzillotto. Saturday (5/20/23) show John McDonagh. (Was also on the air with John and Malachy McCourt on WBAI radio Sunday morning.) I am filled with love and fun and ideas and sparks and joy. Thank you both for seeing Runaway Princess this weekend.
Thank you to my friends that showed up as the show heats up. Most of all thanks Elliott Glick and Monica Glick, the family and staff of The Artist (Starving Artist) on City Island. So filled… so wiped out.
Paindemic World Freeze
Timothy Thompson toBook at Bedtime | with Timothy ThompsonYesterday at 8:57 PMTonight’s reading is dedicated to the inspiring and authentic Mary Goggin. Mary is an actor and writer whose recent autobiographical show, Runaway Princess, has been seen and shown enthusiastically (and to much acclaim!!) around the world. In this show, Mary “shares stories of sex, drugs, and Irish Catholicism, laced with characters based on her experiences as a former professional call girl.” What struck me about seeing this show live (and working with her on an earlier iteration of it), was how Mary treated its heavy subject matter with equal parts humor, honesty, and optimism. Mary is uncompromisingly real, raw, always very funny and has this outstanding capacity of transporting her audience on this journey with her throughout the show (in a way that avoids tropes and is not in any way like an after-school special), and, in the end, we are all better for having gone on this journey with her. The experience of watching Mary in this show has, without a doubt, positively informed me as an artist and person. Thank you for your inspiration and authenticity as an artist-citizen, Mary. God bless you and stay safe at this time.
Bless YOU ALL , Especially you Timothy
Review: ‘“Runaway Princess,” A Modern Tale with Finesse’
Mary Goggin’s story is nested in an immigration fairytale that recalls Irish folklore. She is a runaway princess stumbling through life in all its twists and turns. She relapses into alcoholism, loses her daughter, and gets kicked out of apartments across the United States. Ms. Goggin tells her story with finesse.
There is a subtlety in her expressions, when she reaches out for connection, stomps across a baseball field as a girl, and cries when her father finds her after a drug-filled night. When she remembers her daughter crying out, “You’re all that I have,” during their most desperate times, the cresting and cracking of Ms. Goggin’s voice is raw and real.
Although they are narrated in chronological order, the events of Ms. Goggin’s life play out like a dream. As an imaginative little girl playing with her friend, she searches for horseshoe crabs, and dreams of the sea. As an adult, she has wild forays with drugs. Throughout her tumultuous adulthood, her body is both her enemy and her friend. She says that when she became pregnant, she was “a mother and a drunk.” Her daughter made her want to be good, but she needed to win the battle against her body first.
The tale of this runaway princess seems fantastical at turns, but ultimately grounding and enchanting. It is a masterful story of drugs, homelessness, and prostitution. Ms. Goggin injects effortless humor into stories about her restrictive Irish heritage, and how the people around her failed to understand sexuality. As she departed from the old world into the new, from Ireland to the Bronx, she vividly describes the debaucheries of the 70s. In “The Runaway Princess,” we hear the story of someone who has come into herself, told authentically.
Review: “Runaway Princess” Can Crash At My House Anytime
“Runaway Princess” is about a girl who immigrates from Ireland to a Bronx in a 1970s. As a teenager, Mary Goggin left her Catholic family and went in search of something. Independence, maybe? She found drugs, including weed, speed, and an acid tab with a yellow dot.
When a shady character offers Mary some H, she turns her back to us. The nefarious character says, “Pump your arm up.” A red light above a stage turns blue and Mary gets pricked. She spins around to face us again. “I see a sea of horseshoe crabs,” she says.
When later, a friend gives her a tab of acid, she walks with her arms out like a euphoric Frankenstein and chants, “A streets are paved with gold.” Mary’s performance contains several of these drugged-out moments, between long stretches of storytelling. She will tell us frantically about a stranger she met on a creepy stairway. Then she’ll say, “By a way, now I’m high.” Cue lights changing from sober to psychedelic. Cue slow-motion acting with an almost immobile face, except for one eyebrow raised or one lip twitched. After she takes a acid tab and a lights change, she holds her hands in front of her face and gives them a dead stare. Anyone who has experience with drugs will appreciate this awed-out representation.
I have seen a lot of stories about drugs, prostitution and homelessness, and what sets this one apart is a device of a princess. Mary frames a play as a fairy tale. She says, “Once upon a time, there was a Princess born to a King and Queen who experienced an economic depression and decided to move to America.” This gives a story a meta grace. She knows her own story so well and remembers how it felt, which gives her license to experiment. She can alter humor and pacing by interspersing a scenes with fairy-tale interludes.
She explains why Irish dancers don’t move their arms and why Irish songs are sad. She explains what ankle bracelets meant in a 1970s (that you were going steady with someone) and what her mother thought they meant (that she was pregnant). When she came home wearing one, her mom said, “You are with child!” Mary did a double take and yelled, “What?” Spit shot across a room and onto a wall. A room laughed. And when a laughter died down, silence remained.
See this show if you like Irish culture, drugs, street life, or 1970s throwback references (Ozzy Osbourne is a character).
PS. I learned that Mary had a walk-on role in Broad City (“Stolen Phone,” S1, E6). Wearing a Chanel jacket, she walked by Abbi and Ilana and said, “My son-in-law is such a disgrace. He went to Cornell.” For Broad City fans, Runaway Princess is a must-see.