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New play Indecent tells the story of an 'obscene, indecent, immoral, and impure' Yiddish drama

Paula Vogel speaks to the JC about her play about a play

February 19, 2020 16:04
Paula Vogel
4 min read

In 1946 the Yiddish playwright Sholem Asch warned a company against producing his play God Of Vengeance in Mexico City because "the situation described in the play is dated and no longer exists".

Asch was not the first to try and ban his play. Earlier that year, the Lord Chamberlain had a Yiddish language production in London closed down on rabbinical advice. Most famously, the 1923 English language production on Broadway was also shut down, its producer and cast charged with “unlawfully advertising, giving, presenting, and participating in an obscene, indecent, immoral, and impure drama or play.”

Had another Yiddish playwright, IL Peretz been right when, at a read-through of the new play in 1906, he advised Asch to burn it? These are the questions considered in recent productions.

Daniel Teveles’s recent take, El Dogma was set against the events of the 1919 “Semana Trágica” riots in Buenos Aires. A powerful, recent Hebrew-language version of the play was produced at the Cameri Theater in Tel Aviv and there was a 2016 off-Broadway production in Yiddish with English surtitles.