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The
Gift
Shauna Kanter
In a powerful
theatrical amalgam of strong writing, sensitive and imaginative direction, dynamic
ensemble acting, and an expressionistic, eerily evocative use of the human voice, Shauna
Kanter's The Gift creates a dark but ultimately life-affirming vision of a
terrifying time. It was, as the play makes achingly real, a murderous time shot through
with glimmers of light provided by individuals willing to put their own lives at risk to
save humanity, one person at a time.
For many people, the Holocaust was a mind-numbing horror of six million
murdered, a piece of history hard to imagine until the story of Anne Frank came into focus
through her diary and a play and movies that told her story. The Gift has the
same kind of power. A young woman--and the assumption must be that the play is
autobiographical--is tantalized by the deathbed ramblings of her father who claims that he
helped a woman and two children escape the Nazis in 1939. She follows clues hidden in his
old, altered passport and in photos and other places, that lead her to the startling
conclusion that her father, a Jew and a Communist, left his safe American life to enter
the heart of darkness that was Berlin under the Nazis to save a mother and two little
girls.
That story provides one of the main threads of the play. Another is the
vibrant life within the Yiddish theater of Berlin, peopled by Jewish Berliners who are in
various stages of denial about the growing atrocities around them. These characters make
it painfully clear how tempting it must have been for Jews, even in the shattering
darkness of Kristallnacht, to believe that it would all come to a peaceful end, that good
Germans would just vote this madman and his mad party out of office.
As background to these very personal stories is the larger picture of
Berlin and everyday Germans that is dramatized through powerfully evocative movement and
the human voice, chanting, sighing, breathing, singing. This is expressive work of the
highest order and it is flawlessly conceived and performed. Since the character of the
woman who escapes is a photographer determined to use her camera to document the horrors
all around her, slides of period photographs support the action.
In a production where the ensemble acting is so strong, it is difficult
to point to the actors who truly stand out. Sean Souza, who plays the central character,
is excellent, emotionally open and true to the shifting emotions of a man who must
transcend talk and put his beliefs into action. As Vera, his wife, who also puts herself
at mortal risk in the process of getting the photographer and her children out of Berlin,
Selena Cantor is mesmerizing. Her character must go in an instant from being terrified to
being courageously resourceful and Cantor makes it all heart-stoppingly clear and moving.
Lee Michael Buckman is brilliant as the theatrical impresario of the
city's Yiddish theatre. His character is the droll, often humorous master of denial, and
the moment of his shattering realization that the Nazis do indeed wish to destroy him is
subtly and beautifully realized. Irene Glezos is the photographer, going about her day-job
snapping publicity photos for the acting company and then moving through the streets
taking what could easily be her last photos to prove to the world what really was
happening. Glezos gives a performance that is utterly believable, perfectly creating the
emotional texture and psychic weariness that such a person would feel.
The setting, by Slava Gordon and the lights by Robert W. Henderson,
Jr., create a flexible world for the play, and Jenny Fulton's costumes are a reminder that
Germans of the period could be stylish dressers even in the face of the perils of the
Nazis. Shauna Kanter's direction of her own play, never an easy thing, is flawless.
New York, March 21, 2003
- Roy Sorrels