TENSE DRAMA EXPLORES THE UNEASY
RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN ART AND POLITICS
Taking Sides
by Ronald Harwood
Newcastle
People’s Theatre
Tuesday 10 to Saturday 14 February 2015
The first People’s Theatre studio production of
2015 focuses on the true story of German conductor William Furtwängler, as he
faces interrogation and de-nazification in post-war Berlin.
The maestro finds himself faced with an American
army officer determined to uncover evidence that he was not a saviour of Jews,
but a willing collaborator with the Nazi regime.
Few other musicians
are more intertwined in debates around collaboration, passive resistance, and
the relationship between art and politics as Furtwängler.
Brought up to believe
in the supremacy of Teutonic culture and creativity, his leadership of the
Berlin Philharmonic throughout the 1930s led the Nazis to adopt him as an
ambassador for their values; his recording of Bruckner's Seventh Symphony even accompanied
the announcement of Hitler's death on German radio in 1945.
Yet throughout the war he’d refused to allow Nazi
salutes during performances and made covert efforts to protect Jewish musicians
from persecution.
Harwood’s tense, gripping drama explores one of the
defining, hideous dilemmas of the twentieth century: in totalitarian states,
must artists collaborate and survive, or rebel and risk oblivion? How can music
thrive in the midst of one of the most repulsive regimes imaginable?
What might you have done? That's the question both
implicit and explicit in this uneasy and arresting drama about the role of the
artist trying to create beauty in the midst tyranny.
This modern classic will be getting a rare outing
in Newcastle
upon Tyne in the intimate space of their Studio Theatre.
Tickets:
Taking Sides by Ronald
Harwood
Tuesday
10 to Saturday 14 February 2015 - 7.30pm
The Studio Upstairs, The People’s Theatre, Stephenson Road, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE6 5QF
Also
This Month: The Young People’s
Theatre present Scary Play by Judith
Johnson.
Thursday
26 – Saturday 28 February @ 7.30pm.
Tickets £10/6.
Kal’s
having a sleepover. He tells a story about an old haunted house that just
happens to be a few streets away. Perhaps we should all take a look … that is
if you’re not chicken? Comedy, suspense and the supernatural combine in this
exploration of the hold our imagination has over us. A short play for audiences
age 7+.
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