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The play is based on the Tridentine Mass of the Roman Catholic Church , which was the order of Liturgy in use at the time of its commissioning by Mrs. Kennedy. By the time the play debuted in 1971, however, the Catholic Church had adopted the Novus Ordo Missae , following the reforms of the Second Vatican Council . The play also includes some additional texts written by Bernstein and Broadway composer Stephen Schwartz .


CAST OF CHARACTERS

In its traditional layout, the cast consists of the Celebrant, an altar server, and three choirs.

  • Celebrant – The central character of the play, he is a Catholic Priest who performs the actions of the Mass.

  • Latin Choir – Arrayed to one side of the stage is a Choir of men and women who sing the Latin portions of the Mass.

  • Boys Choir – This choir of boys responds to the Latin choir's chanting and is present on the opposite side of the stage from the Latin choir.

  • Street Choir – Sharing center stage with the Celebrant is a group of men and women who participate in the prayers of the Mass, and present their reactions to those prayers in a modern context.

  • Altar Server – He assists the Celebrant in various actions throughout the course of the play.



SYNOPSIS


At the beginning of the play, all performers are in harmony and agreement. During the course of the Mass, however, the street choir begins expressing doubts and suspicions about the necessity of God in their lives and the role of the Mass itself. At the play's emotional climax, this doubt and confusion spreads to the Celebrant himself, who hurls the just-consecrated bread and wine to the ground in an act of Sacrilege . The other cast members collapse to the ground as if dead while the Celebrant sings a song calling his lifetime of faith and beliefs into question. At the end of his song, he too, collapses.

The play is resolved when the altar server, who was absent from the stage during the increasing tension of the various players, sings a hymn of praise to God and restores the faith of the Celebrant and the three choirs, who then join the altar server, one by one, in his hymn of praise.

As in the actual Mass, the last words of the play are: "The Mass is ended; go in peace." In Bernstein's play these words are heard over pre-recorded Tape .


MOVEMENTS


Disc 1

# Antiphon: Kyrie eleison
# Hymn and Psalm: "A Simple Song"
# Responsory: Alleluia
# Prefatory Prayers
# Thrice-Triple Canon: Dominus vobiscum
# In nomine Patris
# Prayer for the Congregation (Chorale: "Almighty Father")
# Epiphany
# Confiteor
# Trope: "I Don't Know"
# Trope: "Easy"
# Meditation no. 1
# Gloria tibi
# Gloria in excelsis
# Trope: "Half of the People"
# Trope: "Thank You"
# Meditation no. 2
# "The Word of the Lord"
# "God Said"


Disc 2

# Credo in unum Deum
# Trope: "Non Credo"
# Trope: "Hurry"
# Trope: "World Without End"
# Trope: "I Believe in God"
# Meditation no. 3: De profundis, part 1
# De profundis, part 2
# "Our Father..."
# Trope: "I Go On"
# "Holy! Holy! Holy!..."
# "Agnus Dei..."
# "Things Get Broken"
# "Secret Songs"


REFERENCES