The story of a Mississippi death row inmate who admitted his guilt
and converted to the Catholic faith after seeing apparitions of the
Virgin Mary has come to the stage in a play that premiered in California
last month.
Cathal Gallagher’s play “Claude Newman: A Miracle on Death Row”
dramatizes the last days of Claude Newman, a convicted murder executed
in Vicksburg, Miss. in 1944 for killing his grandmother’s abusive lover.
Gallagher explained to CNA on Oct. 15 that Newman’s alleged death row visions of the Virgin Mary changed him.
“On the night he was supposed to die, there was a reprieve from the
governor, a two week stay of execution. Claude Newman didn’t want the
stay. He said ‘if you looked into her eyes, and looked into her face,
you wouldn’t want to live another minute’.”
“When I heard all that,” Gallagher said, “I thought ‘this sounds like a good play’!”
The play is running from Sept. 28 to Oct. 21 at Miles Memorial Playhouse in Santa Monica, Calif. under director Maria Vargo.
The play examines Newman’s incarceration, during which he got into an
argument with a Catholic inmate about a miraculous medal of the Virgin
Mary. The inmate threw the medal at him and told him to take it.
Newman put the medal on.
“That night, he had an encounter with the Virgin Mary and told the chaplain about it,” Gallagher said.
The chaplain, Fr. Robert O'Leary, SVD, didn’t believe Newman until the
inmate told him about events that happened earlier in the priest’s life.
“And that was the beginning of the story,” Gallagher said.
Newman converted to Catholicism through the chaplaincy.
Gallagher’s play considers the apparition and its effects on Newman and
those around him.
Newman did not admit his crime until after the
apparition, which Gallagher said was evidence in favor of the
authenticity of the convict’s experience of the Virgin Mary.
The playwright said the available information on Claude Newman is
sometimes contradictory.
Fr. O’Leary recorded a tape about his
experience with Newman about 20 years after the inmate’s execution,
though Gallagher said he had given his own copy of the tape to someone
else.
Marcia Stein, archivist at the Robert M. Myers Archives of the Society
of the Divine Word’s Chicago province, said Newman’s story was
“controversial” at the time.
The play on Newman’s life is being produced by the G.K. Chesterton
Theatre Company, a Catholic non-profit Gallagher and others founded
three years ago.
Gallagher said Catholics “have to put out our own entertainment.”
“A Hollywood producer once said that entertainment has more influence
on young people than parents do. I think that if as Catholics we allow
the culture, the Hollywood culture especially, to dictate what
entertainment we are going to get, we are going to lose an entire
generation,” he said.
“That’s one reason that we decided to establish the theater company.”
The company does not have its own space. It rents out theaters rather than use church halls.
“That way, the secular society comes to us,” Gallagher said. “If we want to engage the culture, we have to go out to them.”
The company is “lucky to break even” and lacks major benefactors, the playwright said.
“We’ll keep going as long as we can.”
The company has staged four other productions of plays with Catholic
themes, including a play about the British journalist Malcolm
Muggeridge’s encounter with Mother Teresa, a play about the Mexican
martyr Bl. Miguel Pro, and a play about Franz Jagerstatter, a
conscientious objector in Austria who refused to fight in World War II.
Gallagher’s son Peter heads the G.K. Chesterton Theatre Company. He
said the company is considering extending its performances of “Claude
Newman: A Miracle on Death Row” through Oct. 28.
The theater company’s website is www.gkctheatre.org.