My Amazon and Goodreads review of Actress by Anne Enright (Rating 3) – The Stage Curtain Stays Down. Anne Enright’s novel Actress is three fictional biographies in one. First is the life story of Katherine O’Dell, the title character. Second is Norah, her daughter and the memoir’s “author.” The third, and Norah’s motivation in writing the book, recounts their mother-daughter relationship. Norah undertakes this task upon reaching the age at which Katherine died. She excavates the verifiable details of her mother’s life from an early and fast rise to stardom to the too-early decline imposed by a youth-hungry public. In Katherine’s case, public humiliation was accompanied by private descent into madness. Norah’s overriding question is “Where did reality end and performance begin?” Applied to her and her mother, were they as close as she imagined or was it an act and, if so, by whom? Norah reaches a satisfactory conclusion about her own life as a wife, mother, and novelist. But to my mind, she never answers that question in regard to her mother and their relationship. As a writer who has often tried to unravel the complex dynamics between mothers and daughters (see my Amazon author page and Goodreads author page), I know that pat answers are neither possible nor rewarding. Yet allowing for, and even welcoming, ambiguity, Actress never raises the stage curtain more than a few inches. In dramatizing this story, I wish Enright had lifted the curtain higher and better filled the stage.