Cambridge, Massachusetts, Sunday, April 26th, 8pm:
Ian Thal hosts a staged reading of his play, Total War, at Outpost 186, located at 186 1/2 Hampshire Street, Cambridge MA.
Total War was recently named a semi-finalist in the 2009 Dorothy Silver Playwriting Competition. The reading is an opportunity both for the author to develop the play through listening and for an audience to experience a stripped-down version of a work-in-progress. A talk-back will follow the reading.
The reading will feature the talents of local actors including: Dale Appel, Anika M. Colvin-Hannibal, John M. Costa, Anthony DiBartolomeo, Mikey DiLoreto, Lou Fuoco, Kate Heffernan, Andrew Hicks, Lesley Anne Moreau, Krystle Spoon, and Tom Sprague.
Total War is a five-act play set at a Catholic university where the student newspaper has published a Holocaust denial advertisement. While faculty and staff attempt to show solidarity with the small Jewish community on campus, an anarchist-cell using the nom de guerre of “Total War” begins a campaign of guerrilla art attacks before a predictable dialogue on free speech and religious pluralism can begin.
Though a work of fiction, Total War was inspired by events Thal witnessed while attending graduate school, exploring the history (and potential futures) of Jewish-Catholic relations, historical memory, and the conflict between grass-roots activism and institutional power. It is a story made timely after the scandal surrounding Vatican’s recent lifting of the excommunication of the anti-Semitic Society of Saint Pius X and its Holocaust-denying Bishop, Richard Williamson.
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Friday, April 17, 2009
April 26th: A Staged Reading of "Total War" @ Outpost 186
Posted by Ian Thal at 12:17 PM
Labels: Cambridge Massachusetts, Holocaust Denial, Outpost 186, performance, total war
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2 comments:
Congratulations on being a semi-finalist! What an achievement. The play sounds fascinating, and quite relevant. And yesterday was Holocaust Remembrance Day.
Thanks. It was only after I had booked the venue that I realized that the the reading would be within days of Yom HaShoah. It wasn't planned, but it's appropriate.
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