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(Stephen) Fry’s delight: his new film with Lena Dunham

Stephen Fry and Lena Dunham on how they connected with their Jewishness while shooting a road movie in Poland

June 14, 2024 15:16
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Father on: Stephen Fry in Treasure
6 min read

So we’re waiting on Her Majesty, Guinevere,” chuckles Stephen Fry, the British actor-comedian-QI guru as he sits next to me in a Berlin hotel room. “Her Majesty” is, in this instance, Lena Dunham, the once-called “voice of a generation” who co-created the HBO show Girls. She sweeps in, looking suitably regal. “I was giving our director a hug because she looked so beautiful,” she chimes, referring to German filmmaker Julia von Heinz (2020’s And Tomorrow The Entire World) who stands in the doorway looking freshly hugged.

German film director Julia von HeinzGerman film director Julia von Heinz[Missing Credit]

Together, this ever-so-slightly unlikely trio have collaborated on Treasure, a touching adaptation of Lily Brett’s book Too Many Men. A father-daughter story, one that stirs up memories of Jonathan Glazer’s The Zone of Interest, Fry plays Edek Rothwax, the son of factory owners in Łódź who joins his daughter Ruth (Dunham), a music journalist for Rolling Stone, on a restorative trip to his native Poland. The year is 1991, 12 months after Edek lost his wife, with whom he survived Birkenau-Auschwitz.

Fry with co-star Lena DunhamFry with co-star Lena Dunham[Missing Credit]

The shoot took both actors to the real concentration camp. “You can imagine the stories there,” says Fry, 66, who admits he was taken aback by its regimented nature. “There’s a very orderly, incredibly good condition railway siding and main platform and everything is as it happened,” he says. “Rudolf Höss and his team, when they built it, they built it with an absolute eye to efficiency and symmetry and order. So that was a shock, if you like.” He then turns to Dunham. “And you obviously had a lot of feelings too.”

Dunham first went to Poland in her early twenties, when she joined college friends on a trip that saw them drink vodka, chase boys and visit chocolate shops. “I remember saying, ‘Should I go and visit Auschwitz?’ And my mother and my grandmother, Dorothy, who was still living then, [said] ‘Why would any Jew ever want to go there? It’s not a tourist site! Just go and have a nice time with your friends, you don’t need to do that.’ And that was sort of the mentality, even though our family is Polish, with a significant amount of lives lost, during that time, and in that area.”

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film