When Manet’s Mother Superior dryly asks, “God, when will this nightmare end?” we wonder right along with him. The Nuns has all the essential elements of a nightmare—from absurdly morbid sequences with a circus flavor, to the audience’s voyeuristic pleasure. This dark comedy, set during the Haitian slave revolt of 1804, cloisters the three sisters in a basement, hatching a nefarious scheme to escape. Mother Superior (Robert Rosen), Sister Angela (Vincent Gracieux, looking more like Ernest Borgnine than any nun should), and deaf-mute Sister Inez (the sensational Steven Epp) wear their habits without qualification, falsetto, or wink-wink. The dialogue isn’t of notable merit—what probably is deep and existential in French is staccato and awkward in translation—but the strange dance of the characters (plus a corpse) is exquisitely timed physical comedy. As strange and jarring as this all is, it makes for an excellent post-mortem over cheesecake. If you like your nuns a little bit naughty, rent John Guare’s House of Blue Leaves. If you think the Marx Brothers would be more entertaining with a dose of gore and a blinking Madonna, this may be the show for you. Theatre de la Jeune Lune, (612) 333-6200
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