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2007 Dramatisation of Lucy Clifford's
short story "The New Mother"
Following the success of Kathleen McDonnell's
dramatisation of this story and its production by Youtheatre in
Montreal in 2005 a new presentation was made of the play in
Cleveland Ohio On January 13th 2007. [report will follow here]
2005-6 Dramatic Production
In 2005
Youtheatre in Montreal produced an adaptation of Lucy
Clifford’s short story The New Mother. The play was
written by Kathleen McDonnell an American writer who has lived
in Canada since 1969.
Youtheatre was established in 1968 and is dedicated to
presenting world-class theatre for Canadian audiences. Their
director states that:-
At
Youtheatre, we are committed to creating original,
innovative and challenging new works for young audiences. We do
not shy away from difficult and controversial subjects, in fact,
they are our priority…….Only by creating work that reflects our
concerns and the world in which we live can we transcend our
selves and see the world in a new light. I believe the work we
do enables children and young adults to see that it is possible
to change the world (and if not the world, then themselves and
the world in which they live).
The
Youtheatre production in 2005 was apparently a great success
and will be produced again in the fall of 2006.
It is interesting to see
how Kathleen McDonnell has used Lucy Clifford’s story to
illustrate modern family dilemmas arising from parent/child
relationships. She sees the Ragged Girl of Lucy‘s original story
as representing dangerous but alluring peer pressure to break
established patterns of behaviour. She presents the children as
tragic victims of a love that is totally conditional on their
good behaviour. Furthermore in her dramatisation the ending of
the story is changed so that the children’s mother eventually
returns to them. The horrific ‘New’ Mother is shown now to
be the flipside of the ‘perfect’ mother. The
terrifying and shocking ending of Lucy Clifford's story is thus
made acceptable but what she would have thought of it I wonder?
2006 New Publication
In 2006 lulu.com published
a paperback edition of Anyhow Stories.
Full details of the book
and the full text of the short story The New Mother can
be found on
http://www.lulu.com/anyhow-stories.
2002 Guardian Newspaper Article
In 2002
Charlotte Moore contributed to
The Guardian Newspaper an article about autism in children.
In it she referred at length to Lucy Clifford’s short story
Wooden Tony. Charlotte Moore’s own book about her
autistic sons, Sam and George, is published in Penguin
Books and she has frequently written articles about the problems
of dealing with autism in children. Others have observed that
the short story Wooden Tony in which a troubled little
boy wants to be ‘very far off and very little’ seems to be an
inversion of Carl Collodi's story of Pinocchio. In Lucy Clifford’s
story Tony’s mother eventually feels that she has to give in to
her son’s wish to escape this world and she allows him to be
taken away by a mysterious visitor who eventually turns him into
a wooden figure in a cuckoo clock.
Charlotte Moore sees the
story as a true description of autistic behaviour but of course
with a macabre fairy tale ending. She ends her article by
stressing that parents need to respect their child’s autism but
should struggle to keep the child from losing touch with the
real world.
Wooden Tony was
included in Anyhow Stories for Children published
by Duckworth in 1899. In 1878 William and Lucy had spent time
near the Mediterranean and in the Swiss Mountains. Thomas Huxley
had encouraged them to travel there in order to improve
William's health. In her story Lucy
Clifford used the image of a strange child she had observed outside a poor peasant's cottage in the
Monte Generosa mountains to dramatically describe a condition
not recognized or named until more than sixty years later.
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