Synopsis The Vatican 1978: a little-known Cardinal from Venice is elected to succeed Pope Paul VI. A compromise candidate, he takes the name Pope John Paul I, and quickly shows himself to be the liberal the reactionaries within the Catholic Church most feared. Just thirty-three days later, he is dead. No official investigation is conducted, no autopsy is performed, and the Vatican’s press release about the cause of death is later found to be, in large part, false. And just the evening before his death, John Paul had warned three of his most influential but hostile Cardinals that they would be replaced. His death marks the climax of fifteen troubled years of controversy and machination within the Church; schisms threaten its unity and the shadow of the Mafia hovers over its financial affairs. Only Cardinal Benelli has the power to challenge the dead Pope's enemies. This incisive thriller tracks the dramatic tensions, crises of faith and political manoeuvrings inside the Vatican surrounding the death of the man known as 'the Smiling Pope’ Running time approx. 2 hours 30 minutes
There is a strange moment in the second act of Roger Crane’s play about the papal succession and politics in the Vatican when the innocent new Pope John Paul I protests to a stage full of cardinals that “I am what I am!” Surely these men in red frocks won’t break into a chorus from La Cage aux Folles?
No, they won’t, for this is a sombre, rather old-fashioned thriller, first seen at Chichester in May, that brings David Suchet back to the London stage as the scheming pope-maker Benelli, Cardinal of Florence, and offers him a fine opportunity to strut his ecclesiastical stuff.
The year is 1978 and Benelli is confessing his crime – “I have killed the emissary of God” – as the play begins, but things are a little more complicated than that. The great attraction of Crane’s play – the first ever by this 61 year-old New York lawyer – is its picture of a Catholic Church in turmoil.
Pope Paul VI (Clifford Rose) is dying, and the effects of the previous incumbent’s (Pope John XXIII) efforts to “open the window of the church for a dialogue with the world” in the Second Vatican Council are still being resisted.
Benelli’s manoeuvring of Luciani (Richard O'Callaghan), the Cardinal of Venice and the son of a bricklayer, into the top job promises a programme of practical reform. Luciani is a no-nonsense radical who will not be carried into St Peter’s for his coronation and who sends a telegram of congratulation to the parents of the first test tube baby in Britain.
This new pope lasted just thirty-three days, and the subsequent inquest has all the non-rigour of a police investigation into police corruption. In the background hovers the sale of the Catholic Bank of Venice and the mysterious suicide of the financier Roberto Calvi in London.
In Chichester, David Jones’s production had a magnificent sweep on the large thrust stage, with cardinals processing down the aisles and William Dudley’s imposing design of great confessional grills and religious frescos conveying an epic quality. The play is squeezed tighter in the Haymarket, but the writing is also more cruelly exposed as completely clunky; the cardinals speak as if in quotation marks.
Suchet is superb as Benelli, saturnine, struck with both ambition and guilt, and there are engaging performances from O’Callaghan as the breath of fresh air and John Franklyn-Robbins as the octogenarian conservative Ottaviani.
The cast is the same as at Chichester, except for John Cormack replacing Bruce Purchase as Baggio, and it is a special pleasure to re-visit Charles Kay’s feline and supercilious Felici, head of the Vatican Supreme Court, a performance of rare, almost Japanese, intensity, compiled entirely of one great elegant, pop-eyed smirk.
I couldn't better David Baxter's review below: stunning and fascinating. The audience yesterday laughed one minute, then there was an intake of breath, then such silence as to enable the hearing of the proverbial pin. Wonderful set and lighting, equally excellent performances by all, especially David Suchet. If you are interested in religion and/or politics, especially if you are interested in religious politics, try and get there before it finishes on 15 September. I'm off to the library to read up on the whole affair... - Lorna
30 Aug 07
David Suchet and the whole cast are superb. Go and see this play before it closes you will not be dissapointed. I do hope the producers decide to take this on tour - Ivor
25 Aug 07
A Nice ensemble of actors -of particular note is the actor who plays John Paul I and David Suchet is the glue that holds it all together.The play was of great interest to me -but I am a Roman Catholic. It was a good as to if you like it or love it might have to do with your interest in the Catholic Church. - Robert
30 Jul 07
Anyone fearing for the future of serious drama in the West End should hurry to the Haymarket as The Last Confession is a serious drama indeed. The play is reminiscent of Schiller with it's dramatic imagining of historic events. Roger Crane's piece constructs a plausible argument that the liberal Pope John Paul I could have been murdered by reactionary cardinals or even those linked to a corrupt Vatican bank. However he is clever enough to ensure that the possibility that the death was due to a heart attack brought on by overwork is also given credibility. David Suchet is excellent as Cardinal Benelli who is seeking his own faith as much as the truth but he leads a superb ensemble with particularly good support from Bernard Lloyd, Charles Kay and especially Richard O'Callaghan as the seemingly innocent new pope who demonstrates a steely determination to modernise the Vatican. William Dudley's design is perfectly suited to the Haymarket with it's marbelled walls and painted ceilings. The Last Confession is a gripping drama and religious thriller which will be thought about for a considerable time afterwards. - David Baxter
12 Jul 07
Intelligent and gripping throughout. Great performances from the whole cast: David Suchet gets the headlines, but Richard O'Callaghan and Clifford Rose are very memorable also. Powerful and absorbing. - chris
07 Jul 07
Intelligent and gripping throughout. Great performances from the whole cast: David Suchet gets the headlines, but Richard O'Callaghan and Clifford Rose are very memorable also. Powerful and absorbing. - chris
07 Jul 07
Saw this last night and we were really impressed by David Suchet and a truly wonderful cast. It looks great too and whilst the writing has its patchy moments, it is a gripping evening. - S Grayson
Opened 29 Dec 1720. Closed in 1737 (partly for attacking the government), re-opened 1747. The current theatre opened on 4th July 1821 and was designed by Nash. The last theatre in London to use candles (1837). 888 seats. Society of London Theatre member.
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