Sunday, April 30, 2017

Indecent

Indecent
Cort Theater
April 28, 2017

Photo courtesy of Indecent
In Indecent collaborators Paula Vogel and Rebecca Taichman explore the power of the creative voice to change lives.  It tells the story of The God of Vengeance, a Yiddish play written by Sholem Asch in 1907.  The play traveled to major cities in Europe and then came to the United States.  New York was the only city where the play was censored.  It opened on Broadway in 1923.  The production was shut down due to its offensive subject matter.  Indecent is a tender, passionate, revealing, and inspirational telling of the journey of that production and the people involved.

Sholem Asch’s wife is most excited about her husband’s provocative new play The God of Vengeance.  She is particularly enthusiastic about the superbly written love scene between two female characters.  When Asch reads the play with the leaders of the Polish Yiddish theatre, they are appalled.  In their mind, not only is the lesbian scene highly inappropriate, but the fact that the main character, a Jewish family man, runs a brothel and disrespects the Torah is blasphemous.  Only one man in attendance, Lemml, finds the play life-affirming.  Together Asch and Lemml take the play to Berlin, where it is highly received.  Lemml stage manages successful productions of The God of Vengeance across Europe and then to New York City, where the lives of everyone involved change forever.

Photo courtesy of Indecent
The choice by playwright Paula Vogel to tell the story through the eyes of the stage manager is brilliant.  This character has the objective reminiscence of events as well as a deep personal connection to the progression of the story.  Richard Topol portrays Lemml, the Stage Manager, with multiple layers.  He grows with the advancement and acceptance of the production of The God of Vengeance, and never lets go of his belief in its value.

Photo courtesy of Indecent
The cast is an amazing ensemble.  They all play numerous roles, at times transforming in a moment in front of our eyes.  Some of Paula Vogel’s scenes are written in both English and Yiddish.  The brilliance of the collaboration between her and Director Rebecca Taichman is how the scenes shift from one language to the other.  The characters go from speaking fluent English to struggling with their words as non-English speaking Polish immigrants.  This illustrates the challenge the characters face when they arrive in the United States.  Their desire to succeed in a country where they cannot easily communicate is not hindered by this obstacle.  When their production moves to Broadway, the cast is arrested and the show is shut down, even after the lesbian scene is cut out of the play.  The disclosure of the specific indecency in the theme of the production is thought provoking and relevant to our present day moral identity.

Photo courtesy of Indecent
What remains beyond success and failure?  What lives on after a work of art is viewed, experienced, and then discarded.  This is what Indecent asks us to think about.  The creative impulse that motivates art to reflect the truth is what keeps the action of this play moving forward and the audience completely engaged.  Go see it.


Domenick Danza

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