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Synopsis A group of schoolchildren, Jewish and Catholic, declare their ambitions: one to be a fireman, one a film star, one a pilot, another a doctor. They are learning the ABC. This is Poland, 1925. As the children grow up, their country is torn apart by invading armies, first Soviet and then Nazi. Internal grievances deepen as fervent nationalism develops; friends betray each other; violence escalates: until these ordinary people carry out an extraordinary and monstrous act that darkly resonates to this day. Running time: 3hrs inclu. interval. Part of the Travelex £10 season
There is one terrifying incident at the centre of this powerful but only partially engrossing new Polish play that tracks the lives of ten school friends in the small town of Jedwabne in the north east of the country.
On 10 July 1941, the town’s Jews, half the population of 3,000 people, were murdered during an eight-hour pogrom, many of them herded into a barn and burnt alive. The question of responsibility, leading to sharp divisions between the Catholic and nationalist communities, rumbles on today, dragging many books, documentaries and films along with it.
In Our Class, the 54-year-old playwright Tadeusz Slobodzianek challenges his country’s memory of the atrocity but leaves most options open. So sensitive is the issue, that the National’s production – in a version by Ryan Craig from a literal translation by Catherine Grosvenor – is a world premiere.
A group of ten children are first seen, aged five or six, recounting what they want to be when they grow up: a shoemaker, a fireman, a teacher, a wagon maker. They tell their stories in the third person as they watch films, go dancing, welcome the Red Army, scatter before the Nazis, fall in love, memorialize their lost ones, apportion blame, recover their identities.
It’s a harrowing tale, but Bijan Sheibani’s three-hour production is a fairly cool and collected chronicle, staged in a sunken oblong pit designed by Bunny Christie and trimmed with neon lights as the roof descends at the moment of horror to the sad accompaniment of a lone accordion.
We think of modern Polish theatre from Jerzy Grotowski to Tadeusz Kantor as much more impassioned than this, much darker and more spiritual. An adept English cast playing Jews and Catholics, friends and lovers, is better able to convey the detail of the story than the soul of the community, but they do so with great accomplishment.
There is the question of who killed Edward Hogg’s Jakub, or harboured Paul Hickey’s Menachem, who was the traitor and who killed the baby. Sinead Matthews and Amanda Hale, idiosyncratic comic actors, give different accounts of survival, while Justin Salinger, Tamzin Griffin and Jason Watkins present characters at once invaded by and in flight from a stain of grim reality that spreads across the century.
Travelled from Birmingham to see this twice. Superb acting by all the cast. It really makes you think about life and the fact that things like this still go on in the world. - Janice Taylor
22 Dec 09
shocking first half - wonderful stylised acting, mimimal set somehow made it even more poignant.. however a bit overlong.. - Miranda
19 Nov 09
I fully accept theatre's role to inform as well as entertain and I consider myself tolerent and my taste broad, but this slice of Polish history would be better served as a TV documentary or a book. I found the albeit excellent and passionate acting actually detracted from the harrowing story being told and to me it just didn't belong in the theatre. - Gareth James
09 Oct 09
I was ultimately a bit disappointed with this play. Despite superb ensemble acting, this is much more a documentary than a play. It examines the horrific massacre and the anti-semitism that happened in Poland, but it never explores motivations or reasons, it just documents the facts. It lacks all dramatic tension, and in the second half it wanders off into what happened to the survivors without managing to interest me at all. - Peter
25 Sep 09
Highly recommended and some powerful acting. Only 4 stars because the second half in portraying the lives after the pogrom could have been a little tighter (but that is being really picky!). Go. - Charlie Hamilton
25 Sep 09
A faultless,brilliantly directed & acted production, unlike anything I have ever seen before. Don't let the length put you off as it wasn't a minute too long. This is theatre at its best! - kathleen
25 Sep 09
Amazing production, thought provoking and intelligent. Really stays with you. Compelling. - S David
24 Sep 09
powerful, well-acted and simply directed. an excellent and thought-provoking production. - A Wright
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