Synopsis
Jane Wenham - The Witch of Walkern
Published by Faber & Faber
3 Male 6 Female
Walkern, 1712
England has been free from witch-hunts for decades
Until Jane Wenham is blamed for a tragic death and charged with witchcraft
A terrifying ordeal begins as the village is torn between those who want to save Jane's life and those who claim they want to save her soul
Inspired by events in a Hertfordshire village, the play explores sex and society's hunger to find and create witches
REVIEWS
"Walkern is not a happy place
Under its quiet exterior, fear and resentments and illicit passions bubble, and although some say that the hanging of Eleanor Thorn for witchcraft will cure the rot, the new parson, Samuel Crane believes that there are witches everywhere much to the consternation of the Bishop Hutchinson
The latter doesn't believe in witches, but he knows that he, like many men, has the devil in his britches
He abuses his power over his servant, Kemi Martha, former slave who, although she might be free in law, is still in thrall to the whims of Hutchinson
Kemi's insistence that the air is "too thin" in Walkern is echoed by the experience of the other women in the village ...
Eleanor's daughter, Ann is being driven mad by grief and her own and men's desires
Widow Higgins the taphouse owner faces the difficulties of a woman alone
And Jane Wenham draws attention to herself through her isolation
When a village child dies, accusations are made and the witch pricker called in
Lenkiewicz throws religion, fear, intolerance, prejudice and a headless chicken into the pot to create a heady brew" ~ The Guardian