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Shylock as you've never seen her

Get ready for the Shakespeare character based on outspoken East End boobas, says Tracy-Ann Oberman

February 2, 2023 14:42
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6 min read

The phone rings. It is Tracy-Ann Oberman hurrying somewhere. She asks, “can you be in Marylebone in an hour?”

The actor, writer and campaigner is running a little late for this interview and, by way of explanation, though without at all sounding like a brag, she then says, “I just met the King.”

That is so going in the piece, I tell her.

The occasion was King Charles’s visit to the Community Security Trust (CST).

Oberman is a trustee. However, this was not the first time the actor — who is almost as well known for her activism as her acting — had met the monarch. In 2019, when the King was still a prince, he hosted a Buckingham Palace reception to mark Jewish contributions to British life.

This was just before the general election when the rise of antisemitism associated with Corbyn was at its peak and Oberman was regularly being targeted by antisemites on social media.

When she thanked Charles for his support, he replied that he didn’t want the Jewish community to feel it was alone, she says.

Actors who have an interest in politics are not rare, some might say unfortunately. But few find that their performative and political lives dovetail quite so neatly as they do with Oberman, whose latest project, a version of The Merchant of Venice, is very much linked to her track record of confronting antisemitism.

This has not always been the case, of course. Her television career was launched in earnest as Chrissie Watts in EastEnders in the mid 2000s. Since then, Oberman has repeatedly proved she is as at home in comedies such as Friday Night Dinner as she is in dramas like Channel 4’s It’s A Sin.

On stage she is no less in demand. Oberman was as terrific in director Jamie Lloyd’s stellar-cast Pinter season as she is in the current West End revival of Michael Frayn’s meta farce Noises Off, where she is appearing alongside Felicity Kendal, a role she’ll have to leave to begin rehearsing her Merchant.