This short play set in the Magdalen Laundries involves a group of women working in the laundries under the watchful eye of Mother Victoria and novice nun Sister Virginia. The women, “fallen women” have parted with their babies and are given no choice but to stay imprisoned by the punitive Mother Victoria. The year is 1963, and another timeframe is used, 1992, where one of the babies comes back seeking her mother.
Reading a play was quite a change for me but I really enjoyed it. The dialogue was very strong and along with the stage directions and some other details, I could visualise it very clearly.
The subject matter was bleak but the play was not without humour. The banter among the laundry workers was really well done. We learned the backstories of the characters in how the dialogue unfolded in the present. The confinement and harsh judgement that these women are subject to is truly despicable but that they have no contact at all with their babies is reprehensible and surely contributes to a collective trauma, a very dark part of our history, which has been too long in a shadowy silence.
The hypocrisy at the helm of these institutions was wonderfully shown in the horribly cruel way the women are treated, spoken about and spoken to, and the almost constant interspers of prayer, religion and chant really shines a light on the hypocrisy at play here.
Overall a really good read, definitely not one I would have independently picked up but I’m very glad I did. The ending is surprising and the link between the two timeframes is a good way to draw the play to a close. It shows how our actions don’t just exist in a vacuum, but have lasting consequences that can live on for generations.