Browse the Plays
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- Experience Chronicled
- Allegoric or Metaphoric Representations
- Concentration and Extermination Camps
- Deniers and Denial
- Germany, Hitler and the Growth of Nazism
- European Jewry Before the Holocaust
- Escape
- The Ghettos
- Hiding
- Righteous Gentiles
- Rescue
- Resistance
- Liberation
- Nazi War Crimes and Judgement
- Other Victims of Nazi Persecution
- Perpetrators, Bystanders and Collaborators
- Survivors and Subsequent Generations
- Theater During Holocaust
- Women and the Holocaust
- Experience Chronicled
Tags: Reading
Tikkun Olam
Taking the story of a real-life Holocaust Memorial campaign, director Teunkie van der Sluijs’ first play, Tikkun Olam, starts with a single question. What is a nation other than the stories it tells itself?
Filmed at Riverside Studios as a rehearsed reading, the actors appear on stage, scripts in hand. As a man and a woman begin talking – to each other, over each other – we piece together their conversation. Dan (played by Luke Thompson) is a political researcher, working for MP Steve Alexander (Jake Fairbrother). The woman, Leah (Debbie Korley), has been contacted by Dan because her online presence, chiefly on Twitter, garners attention. Her degree of influence and her background – feminist, Black, Jewish – has made her an important voice on social media. Alexander is fronting a proposal to build a Holocaust Memorial in the borough of Westminster.
Local residents, including Mary (Diana Quick) are against the installation. The scale of the Memorial is too big, they say. Their park, their green space, will be greatly reduced. There will be an inquiry, and Dan is eager to recruit Leah as a consultant. Their initial meeting does not start well: he assumes she has arrived to attend a meeting on knife-crime.