3,578 posts
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Post by showgirl on Mar 15, 2018 13:41:15 GMT
"Brooklyn, 1938. Phillip and Sylvia Gellburg are a married couple living increasingly separate lives.
Phillip is obsessed with getting ahead, in a real estate company where he is the only Jew.
Sylvia is disturbed by news of Kristallnacht from Germany. In a single night, the Nazis destroyed thousands of Jewish homes and businesses, smashing windows and burning synagogues. Haunted by these images, she becomes ill and is unable to move.
Phillip takes her to see the popular and attractive Dr Harry Hyman, whose ‘talking cure’ has unexpected consequences."
As I saw this less than 24 hours ago and it's a dense, resonant play, it still feels too soon for me to have sufficient perspective and to be able to write something clear and coherent - but I want to post now because it's so impressive, and to urge those who can to travel to Watford in case it doesn't receive the transfer it deserves.
So, this play, which premiered in 1994 (and won the 1995 Olivier Award for Best New Play) isn't as well-known as All My Sons, View From A Bridge and The Crucible, but deserves to be and I'm amazed not to have noticed any revival in the last 20+ years. The title refers to Kristallnacht but there are so many issues in the play itself: communication, fear, forgiveness, impotence, wasted lives and so on, that I can't do it justice. No, it's not an easy watch and I could have done without the insistent cello accompaniment, but it seems to me a play which needs to be seen.
If you need a nudge, Watford is only 15 minutes from Euston by fast train and seniors can see any matinee for £13, which for this quality is a steal. The Stage has given it 4 stars and online I've so far seen another 4-star review and a 5-star one. Definitely 4 from me.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 15, 2018 13:51:34 GMT
I've been vacillating on this one; I do love a trip to Watford, but I don't have a lot of free time right now. I think you've nudged me to see if I can squeeze it in next week. (There was a Tricycle production that transferred to the Vaudeville, but I'm horrified to discover that was seven years ago now. Also it had Antony Sher in it so I wasn't fussed if I saw it or not back then.)
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3,578 posts
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Post by showgirl on Mar 15, 2018 16:57:37 GMT
I've been vacillating on this one; I do love a trip to Watford, but I don't have a lot of free time right now. I think you've nudged me to see if I can squeeze it in next week. (There was a Tricycle production that transferred to the Vaudeville, but I'm horrified to discover that was seven years ago now. Also it had Antony Sher in it so I wasn't fussed if I saw it or not back then.) Gosh, Baemax, thank you for this and it just shows how shocking my memory is as I must have known of the Tricycle version at the time and who knows, if I checked back, I might even find I saw the NT original which Theatremonkey mentions. Still, it hasn't been done that much and this year is the 80th anniversary of Kristallnacht, so significant timing for a new production.
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1,250 posts
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Post by joem on Apr 1, 2018 0:02:40 GMT
Tara Fitzgerald and Stanley Townsend were also in that production. Probably Miller's last good play.
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