The play is set in a Jewish ghetto in Vilna, Poland, in 1931. A group of amateur actors are rehearsing a new play, written by their ambitious young director, about Alfred Dreyfus, the French-Jewish military officer whose persecution was opposed by the eloquent Emile Zola. The performers in this play-within-a-play are all good, kindly people, but they have difficulty in accepting the relevance of the “Dreyfus Affair” to their own situation and, furthermore, are preoccupied with the concerns of their personal lives–which leads to a series of very funny and often ironic exchanges with their high-strung director. However their placid conviction that anti-Semitism could not exist in the Poland of their time is abruptly shattered when drunken hoodlums break into their rehearsal and attack them–after which the project is abandoned and the shaken cast members flee, one to the Soviet Union, others to England and Germany, but all now deeply disturbed and apprehensive–and nervously facing a future clouded by the menacing specter of Nazi Germany.
Followed by a talk by His Excellency François Zimeray, French Ambassador for Human Rights and a reception sponsored by the French Consulate of Boston.
This play is the first of the initiative in Theatre and Human Rights of the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy.
Notable dates