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Jesus H. Christ!
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The most electric moments in
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Corpus Christi , Terrence McNally's play about a gay Jesus, come when you
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arrive at the theater. Across the street, Catholic protestors in white berets
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recite Hail Marys into a megaphone. If you approach the police barricade that
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pens them in, they ply you with leaflets charging that the play portrays "the
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Blessed Virgin screaming obscenely to St. Joseph for sexual relations" (sadly,
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it doesn't). Thanks to the controversy, the entire run at the 299 seat
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Manhattan Theatre Club is sold out. Should you manage to lay hands on a ticket,
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you have to run a gauntlet of burly security guards and pass through an airport
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metal detector to get to your seat.
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The
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experience is disorienting--part First Amendment vigil, part X-rated movie.
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Corpus Christi became instantaneously notorious in May, when the New
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York Post revealed that it depicted a Jesus who has sex with his apostles.
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After receiving telephone calls threatening violence, the Manhattan Theatre
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Club canceled the production. But the play was reinstated a week later amid
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protests from nearly every important dramatist in America and many elsewhere.
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Since restoring the play, the Manhattan Theatre Club has been congratulating
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itself on its fearless defense of free expression.
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What a letdown, then, to finally see Corpus Christi
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and encounter neither blasphemy nor artistic courage. On the first score, the
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play comes up short. It is not, in fact, a work of savage (or even mild)
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anti-clericalism, in the tradition of the Marquis de Sade (whose every third
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scene involves priests and nuns performing unspeakable acts) or the films of
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Luis Buñuel (most famously Viridiana , with its infamous parody of the
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Last Supper tableau). There's no nudity or sex onstage, and though the Vatican
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regards the notion of a noncelibate gay Jesus as heretical, the playwright's
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intention is not sacrilegious. McNally's updating of the life of Jesus is much
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in the spirit of Godspell --if slightly more risqué. But while there's
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nothing very shocking about Corpus Christi , its dramatic and
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intellectual thinness is stunning. McNally's real offense is invoking a great
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theme and an all-important principle for something as trite and banal as
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this.
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The play
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is in essence a gay retelling of the Gospel. Thirteen male actors perform a
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variety of parts in a series of sketches. In the first, Joshua, a k a Jesus, is
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born in a sleazy East Texas motel room (the woman screaming for sex is on the
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other side of a thin wall). At 1950s-era "Pontius Pilate High" in Corpus
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Christi, Texas--the town where McNally grew up--Joshua is bullied into playing
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football and taunted by his peers as a "faggot." An encounter in the school
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bathroom leads to an affair with a sinister classmate named Judas. After
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graduation, Joshua hitchhikes across the desert and has occasional
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conversations with his dad, God. He performs miracles and gathers disciples.
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One is a doctor, another an actor, another a male prostitute. They go to gay
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discos and spread the Word. Joshua performs a marriage for two of the apostles.
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After a scrumptious Last Supper, Judas betrays him with a French kiss.
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On the cross, Joshua is mocked as "King of the Queers."
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The staging and performances are competent, if
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uninspired. The real limitations are those of the writer, whose hallmarks are
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weak sophomoric humor and a cloying sentimentality. It's a gag line in this
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play when someone exclaims "Jesus H. Christ!" Joseph opposes naming his son
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Jesus, because people will thing he's a Mexican. "I hear hammering," Jesus
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tells his mother. "Of course you do," she says. "Your father's a carpenter."
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This is silly, and not really funny, but the intent is not to ridicule. The
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spirit is rather one of camp reverence. McNally, who was raised a Catholic,
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apparently considers himself in sympathy with the deeper meaning of
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Christianity, which he boils down to an injunction to be nice to everybody. His
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setting is supposed to teach us that Jesus loves gay people, too. Lest anyone
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miss the point, one of the apostles appears onstage to explain it to the
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audience after the crucifixion. "If we have offended, so be it," he declares.
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"He belongs to us as well as you."
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This is
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weak Christian tea. Equally pallid is McNally's stereotyped portrayal of gay
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people. Like many of his other plays, Corpus Christi seems like ethnic
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PR, in the vein of Fiddler on the Roof or the movie Moonstruck .
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McNally wants to present homosexuals to heterosexuals as witty and wonderful.
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Though his gay characters aren't always perfect, the overall picture is of a
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delightful bunch of fellas. Gay men have flair, taste, and humor. They love
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Callas and cooking. They are sensitive and deep.
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Where McNally fails time and again is by drawing gay people
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as types rather than complex characters. Watch the clip from the film
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version of Frankie and Johnny , for which McNally wrote the screenplay
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based on his own theater play. Michelle Pfeiffer's gay next-door neighbor,
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played by Nathan Lane, is a cut-up, whose jokes are usually variations of the
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theme of being a man who likes other men. In another McNally play-turned-film,
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the maudlin soap opera Love! Valour! Compassion! , Jason Alexander minces
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around, puts on women's clothes, and continually bursts into show tunes. Watch
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as he riffs on those annoying heterosexuals. In Corpus Christi ,
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the disciple characters are thinly sketched versions of familiar clichés: the
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taciturn hairdresser, the buff male hustler, the yuppie lawyer. This may be
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Bethlehem, but it's still The Birdcage .
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By focusing on the fact that
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the play portrays a Christ who has sex with his disciples, the press has
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encouraged a misconception about McNally's work. Most people now assume that
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Corpus Christi is an expression of ACT-UP-style radicalism--the theater
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of queer outrage performed with an NEA grant. But McNally wants to enlarge the
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bourgeoisie, not épater it. Corpus Christi , like his other plays,
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is a work of unchallenging, middlebrow subscription theater on a touchy theme.
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Of course, there's nothing wrong with middlebrow theater if done well. Neil
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Simon has his place. But Neil Simon doesn't congratulate his audience for being
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brave enough to laugh at his jokes. And Neil Simon can be funny.
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The producers of the play,
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basking in the glow of First Amendment martyrdom, have not done much to clear
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up the misunderstanding. During last spring's controversy, McNally's agent
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Gilbert Parker was quoted complaining that no journalist had bothered to
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request a copy of the script of Corpus Christi . When I called to ask for
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one, Parker's office told me that it wasn't releasing it. I don't think the
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playwright or the theater wants people to know that the play is largely
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inoffensive. The frisson of blasphemy has resulted in an overflowing
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house. But were the Philistines at the barricades allowed inside, I fear they
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would find little to stoke their fury--or hold their interest.
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