Meet Sister Helen Prejean, Whose True Story Is Now an Opera at the Met | Playbill

Classic Arts Features Meet Sister Helen Prejean, Whose True Story Is Now an Opera at the Met

Prejean once ministered to men on death row, and her experiences is the topic for the opera Dead Man Walking

Sister Helen Prejean Scott Langley

In 1993, Sister Helen Prejean published a memoir called Dead Man Walking, chronicling her experience ministering to prison inmates on death row. Then in 2000, her book was adapted into an opera composed by Jake Heggie with a libretto by playwright Terrence McNally. Now 30 afters after the publication of her book, which led to Prejean becoming an advocate for the abolishment of the death penalty, Dead Man Walking the opera is now playing at the Metropolitan Opera through October 21.

As Prejean prepares to see her life and work dramatized on the Metropolitan Opera stage, she speaks about her decades-long fight against capital punishment and the power of art to change hearts and minds.

By now, you’ve seen your story appear at numerous opera houses. How does it feel to have this piece arrive at the Met?
Sister Helen Prejean: 
I don’t follow the opera world closely, but when Jake told me, “Helen, it’s going to be at the Met, and it’s going to be opening night,” I knew we had arrived! I’m especially pleased because it allows us to reach an even wider segment of society. The only way we’re ever going to change things is by awakening the people, and since they can’t directly experience the executions, the main way we have to wake them up is through art.

How did you initially become involved with inmates on death row?
For a long time, I was doing what you’d call regular nun stuff—teaching children, working with prayer groups, leading Bible studies. I thought the Christian life was just about charity, being kind to people. But then, my awakening came. I heard a sister speak about social justice and the integral connection between being a follower of Jesus and being a person who worked for justice. A year later, I got an invitation to write letters to Pat Sonnier on death row. I called it “Sneaky Jesus” because I thought it was just a pen-pal thing. I had no idea I was going to end up being in the execution chamber.

A scene from Dead Man Walking at The Metropolitan Opera Karen Almond / Met Opera

And what have you learned in the four decades since that first encounter?
The death penalty crystallizes every social-justice issue we have in the United States. First of all, only poor people are put to death because rich defendants get crackerjack attorneys who file a hundred pretrial motions. Race also plays a part. Even though the majority of homicide victims are people of color, overwhelmingly prosecutors only seek the death penalty when white people are killed. On a personal level, I learned what a mistake it was to stay away from the victims’ families. At first, I didn’t know what to do about their pain, so I stayed away. Now, whenever I accompany someone to execution, I always reach out to the victims’ families.

What was your reaction when you found out that Jake and Terrence McNally wanted to adapt your book into an opera?
I said, “Great! Bring it on!” And when Jake called me, I said, “I don’t know boo scat about opera. Just make me two promises: One, it can’t be atonal. We’ve got to have melodies that people can hum. And two, redemption has to be at the heart of the story.” And he said, “You got it.” Now, I see that opera can convey this story in such a beautiful way because it’s both live drama and music that instructs the heart. It brings us to places we don’t even know we have.

Forty years on, have you seen the national conversation surrounding capital punishment evolve?
When my book came out, support for the death penalty was 80 percent. We’ve made great progress since then. More and more states are shutting it down, prosecutors are seeking it less, and even juries presented with terrible crimes often don’t end up voting for death. We really are a life people—we just need to keep waking people up. So as long as God gives me breath, I’m going to be out on the road, and I’m going to be with the people telling this story.

See Production Photos of Dead Man Walking at the Metropolitan Opera

 
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