O Auto Da Compadecida Review

O Auto da Compadecida is a celebration of the Brazilian gift for turning poverty into poetry and suffering into satire. It reminds us that heaven, if it exists, is not a place for saints. It is a place for rogues, cowards, and hungry tricksters who finally get a hot meal.

What follows is a theological coup. Mary argues that the sinners should be saved not because they were good, but because they were human . She points to their suffering, their hunger, and their ridiculous love for each other. She even puts in a good word for the dog. o auto da compadecida

Suassuna’s genius was using these rogues to critique power. The local baker, who hoards food while the poor starve, is the real villain. The priest, who demands payment for last rites, is a hypocrite. The rich colonel, who values his dog more than a human life, is a monster. João Grilo doesn’t fight these forces with justice; he fights them with a trick. And for the audience, every scam is a righteous revenge. O Auto da Compadecida is a celebration of

But where the play transcends comedy is in its final act. After a shootout kills the main characters, the story ascends—literally—to a celestial courtroom. Here, Suassuna unleashes his most brilliant invention: Jesus refuses to judge humanity. Instead, he sends the Compadecida —Our Lady of Compassion, the Virgin Mary—to act as defense attorney. What follows is a theological coup

When João Grilo dies, Chicó weeps. But the play refuses tragedy. Instead, it resurrects João through sheer narrative will. Because in the sertão, as in life, the story must go on.