{"id":84662,"date":"2022-10-02T12:50:06","date_gmt":"2022-10-02T12:50:06","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/stoppards-leopoldstadt-tackles-holocaust-intermarriage-zionism-for-ny-audience\/"},"modified":"2022-10-02T12:50:06","modified_gmt":"2022-10-02T12:50:06","slug":"stoppards-leopoldstadt-tackles-holocaust-intermarriage-zionism-for-ny-audience","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/stoppards-leopoldstadt-tackles-holocaust-intermarriage-zionism-for-ny-audience\/","title":{"rendered":"Stoppard’s ‘Leopoldstadt’ tackles Holocaust, intermarriage, Zionism for NY audience"},"content":{"rendered":"
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JTA \u2014 Speaking on the phone from an empty balcony in the Longacre Theater in New York, several hours before a preview performance of his latest play, Tom Stoppard said the show is \u201cone that people like to talk to me about.\u201d<\/p>\n

\u201cLeopoldstadt,\u201d which officially hits Broadway on Sunday after an award-winning London debut in 2019, follows multiple generations of a Jewish family in Vienna from the turn of the 20th century through World War II and formation of the state of Israel. Audience members in the preview period have often lingered in the theater after the shows, and Stoppard \u2014 one of the world’s most respected playwrights of the past half century \u2014 said \u201cit’s just amazing\u201d how many of them see parts of their family history in the show.<\/p>\n

So, perhaps unsurprisingly, he asked on the phone: \u201cWhat about your family?\u201d<\/p>\n

The answers he received: this reporter’s family members are inexact about their history, since no one has ever done a DNA test or compiled comprehensive family tree; there are rumors of rabbis from Poland and ancestors from Iraq; there is an uncle whose German-Jewish family displayed Christmas trees in their New York City apartment for decades; and there are various relatives around the globe who know little to nothing about each other’s existence.<\/p>\n

Those answers touch on the array of themes that are introduced in the first minutes of \u201cLeopoldstadt,\u201d which is also the name of Vienna’s storied Jewish quarter and where the play is set. The play is on its surface about several broad developments \u2014 the horrors of antisemitism and the Holocaust, the relationship between socialism and \u201cNational Socialism,\u201d the debate over Israel’s formation.<\/p>\n

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But at its core is a reckoning with the complexity of 20th-century Jewish family histories: how persecution led many to crave assimilation, and hardened others to defend their heritage; how pogroms and wars split up family trees and scattered them across Europe, and beyond; how trauma affected their descendants’ memories of family and of the moments that pulled them apart.<\/p>\n