‘Girl, Interrupted,’ This Play With Music is Stunning and Memorable

(L to R): Katherine Reiss, Mia Pak, Juliana Canfield, Gabii Campo, King Princess, Sally Shaw in 'Girl, Interrupted' (Joan Marcus)
(L to R): Katherine Reiss, Mia Pak, Juliana Canfield, Gabii Campo, King Princess, Sally Shaw in Girl, Interrupted (Joan Marcus)

Matyna Majok’s adaptation of Girl, Interrupted, based on Susanna Kaysen’s titular memoir resonates with lyrical, haunting music by Aimee Mann. The production has been extended yet again until July 12, 2026 and is currently at the Public’s Martinson Hall. The play’s somber music of ballads and gentle, low key blues songs strikes with its cadences and simple, clear lyrics. Both heighten personal identification with the characters. The music informs the acting and is the linchpin that makes the production riveting.

Suzanna (Juliana Canfield of Sterophonic) narrates her journey through McLean as she bumps up against women her age and ultimately crashes into acknowledging she was depressed and tried to kill herself. Initially opaque about the reason why she lands in the psychiatric hospital, she finds comfort in her fellow patients and the cultured and gentle roommate Grace (Mia Pak), who sings-shares that the upscale institution was a temporary home for Robert Lowell, James Taylor, Sylvia Plath and Ray Charles until they got back on their feet.

(L to R): Mia  Pak holds King Princess, Sally  Shaw in Girl, Interrupted (Joan Marcus)
(L to R): Mia Pak holds King Princess with Sally Shaw in Girl, Interrupted (Joan Marcus)

As she sings Grace infers that their experiences at McLean might find their way into a book because Suzanna mentioned she is a writer. Ironically, it would seem that artists, writers and musicians not “right” with the world have passed through McLean and something changed in their lives, though Suzanna quips that Sylvia Plath should have gotten a refund. Plath committed suicide; the “place didn’t work for her.”

Over the span of two hours in dots minimal set design, which includes a wired circular cage raised in a spiraling pattern above the stage that threatens where they may go if “warranted,” we discover why five patients and Suzanna have checked themselves into McLean or were committed. We learn that all don’t fit into the society and have defaulted to various means of self-abuse, perhaps punishing themselves for not adjusting to what others want them to be.

(L to R): Ta'rea Campbell, Juliana Canfiield, Lauren Jeanne Thomas in 'Girl, Interrupted' (Joan Marcus)
(L to R): Ta’rea Campbell, Juliana Canfiield, Lauren Jeanne Thomas in Girl, Interrupted (Joan Marcus)

Directed by Jo Bonny the staging is strong and stylized in a set with few props that relies on Heather Gilbert’s excellent lighting design. The ensemble’s lovely voices reinforce the themes of Majok’s adaptation in the poignant timber of Mann’s soulful notes.

Lisa (singer./song writer King Princess in a sexy, fluid, dynamic portrayal) challenges the others and provides an electric spark of rebellion against an outer world of madness that all the girls appreciate, especially when she escapes to freedom only to be dragged back inside. Like Lisa, each of the girls makes their own attempts at freedom which in the translation of their actions against themselves reveal the extent they feel imprisoned by pain, isolation and self-rejection. We learn Polly (Sally Shaw brought down the house when she sang) poured gasoline over herself to “burn out” the shame and “get rid of” the person she believes herself to be. Tori (Gabi Campo) is dumped in McLean by her parents who insult her and blame her for their problems then take her to “Mexico” where she “shoots speed” because she can’t get what she needs from her parents or presumably anyone.

(L to R): Sally Shaw, Juliana Canfield, King Princess, Mia Pak in 'Girl, Interrupted' (Joan Marcus)
(L to R): Sally Shaw, Juliana Canfield, King Princess, Mia Pak in Girl, Interrupted (Joan Marcus)

Daisy (Katherine Reiss), who goes to McLean as a “seasonal event” is perhaps the most tragic of all having an incestuous relationship with her father. Her food obsession manifests the relationship in a disturbing way and there s nothing that can be done to help her. Likewise, Grace falls apart and it is frightening for the other girls to see her disturbed state when they visit her. Though Tori is forced to leave, she knows she will resort to her drug addiction. Polly is bound up and imprisoned by the sheaths of her scar tissue. Only Lisa and Suzanna remain sentient as the others they are close to “drop like flies.”

Suzanna is stuck in McLean and accepts being there for almost two years getting therapies and speaking with Dr. Wick (Emily Skinner) without a “plan” for her life, knowledge of what is “wrong with her,” or why she feels the way she does. However, she learns something about many asylums and mental institutions. Suzanna discovers it is easy to get into McLean, but it is nearly impossible to get out, even if one signs oneself in or agrees with someone signing her in as she did with a doctor after a fifteen minute interview.

(L to R): Manoel Feliciano, King Princess, Ta'rea Campbell in 'Girl, Interrupted' (Joan Marcus)
(L to R): Manoel Feliciano, King Princess, Ta’rea Campbell in Girl, Interrupted (Joan Marcus)

After almost two years, something happens and she finds a way out, not because she has confronted herself and heals, but because her way out, “marriage,” is acceptable to the doctors and patriarchal insitution. It is obvious her decision is strongly motivated by “fitting in.” In other words, the culture and society only accept women who obey, women who don’t rebel or resist, women who fit into the roles men have proscribed for them. She can be released into the hands of her husband, regardless of the fact that this may be a terrible decision.

Majok’s conclusion has a spiral circularity that satisfies as Suzanna finally realizes what she needed to know about herself years later during a visit at the Frick Museum looking at Vermeers with her bored husband. The event is symbolic and ties in the play’s development neatly. Suzanna has an epiphany looking at a Vermeer painting, really looking at it, without allowing another’s perspective to cloud her own.

Canfield does a fine job throughout assisted by an excellent ensemble. Her interpretation of “I See You,” at the conclusion where Suzanna is finally visible to herself without the filters of the world’s view is especially resonant and current.

Girl, Interrupted runs 110 minutes with no intermission at the Public Theater’s Martinson Hall. https://publictheater.org/productions/season/2526/girl-interrupted/

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About caroleditosti

Carole Di Tosti, Ph.D. is an Entertainment Journalist (Broadway, Off Broadway, Drama Desk voter) novelist, poet and playwright. Carole Di Tosti has over 1800 articles, reviews, sonnets and other online writings, all of which appear on her website: https://caroleditostibooks.com Carole Di Tosti writes for Blogcritics.com, Sandi Durell's Theater Pizzazz and other New York theater websites. Carole Di Tost free-lanced for VERVE and wrote for Technorati for 2 years. Some of the articles are archived. Carole Di Tosti covers premiere film festivals in the NY area:: Tribeca FF, NYFF, DOC NYC, Hamptons IFF, NYJewish FF, Athena FF. She also covered SXSW until 2020. Carole Di Tosti's novel 'Peregrine: The Ceremony of Powers' was released in 2021. Her poetry book 'Light Shifts' was released in 2021. 'The Berglarian,' a comedy in two acts was released in 2023.

Posted on June 5, 2026, in Public Theater and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment.

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