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Drama
Featured

At the beginning of the 20th Century, Leopoldstadt was the old, crowded Jewish quarter of Vienna. But Hermann Merz, a manufacturer and baptised Jew married to Catholic Gretl, has moved up in the world. Gathered in the Merz apartment in a fashionable part of the city, Hermann’s extended family are at the heart of Tom Stoppard’s epic yet intimate drama. By the time we have taken leave of them, Austria has passed through the convulsions of war, revolution, impoverishment, annexation by Nazi Germany and - for Austrian Jews - the Holocaust in which 65,000 of them were murdered. It is for the survivors to pass on a story which hasn’t ended yet.
Tom Stoppard’s Leopoldstadt was first performed at Wyndham’s Theatre, London, in January 2020.
‘One of Britain’s greatest living playwrights to provide his most personal play yet.’ The Times
‘The news that Tom Stoppard has written a new drama ranks as top-end seismic activity.’ Daily Telegraph

A family day at the beach. There’s a song, an argument, a dash across the white sand and into the high rolling waves. We’re in Cape Town and David Lan is ten years old.
Cut to 1969 and, visiting London fresh out of high school, he interviews theatre luminaries Sybil Thorndike, Tom Stoppard, Trevor Nunn, Paul Schofield before heading home to join the South African army.
Now it’s 1999. We’re at the Young Vic where David is interviewed to be artistic director, a job he’d do for eighteen years, ensuring its flowering into a great world theatre. There’s a redesign to be imagined, money to be raised, shows to be staged. And when the doors reopen in 2006 we meet the extraordinary artists he draws in: Ivo Van Hove, Jude Law, Richard Jones, Gillian Anderson, Patrice Chereau, Katie Mitchell, Stephen Daldry, the Isango Ensemble, Yerma, The Jungle, The Inheritance.
We travel to Peter Brook’s Paris, to Iceland in pursuit of a circus Romeo and Juliet, to Lithuania in search of his great grandparents, to a refugee camp in Congo with Joe Wright and Chiwetel Ejiofor, to Broadway for the Tony Awards. There’s spirit mediums in the Zambezi Valley, Chekhov’s Yalta, Luc Bondy’s Vienna, making a BBC film in Angola, rehearsing a new play in Israel/Palestine.
Along the way, memories constantly rise to the surface: the Royal Court in the 70s and 90s, school plays, his parents’ complicated marriage. Woven through it all is his decades long relationship with playwright Nicholas Wright.
At times hilarious and always deeply felt, David Lan’s deft travels evoke a wildly varied life in theatre as well as a unique theatre of life.
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