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Theatre

‘After my sister’s death, I lost my naivety’

Nadine Wojakovski speaks to Israeli comedian, actor, director and playwright Hadar Galron about her latest project

August 29, 2019 14:21
Hadar Galron
2 min read

"Nothing will come out of this child,” said the primary school teacher to Hadar Galron’s parents when she was ten years old.

She’d caught the child impersonating her, and was not impressed. Galron was “petrified that my parents believed her. I didn’t dare ask them. I just made a commitment to myself that I would prove her wrong.”

After 25 years as a comedian, actor, director and playwright in Israel, one might think that the point has been proven. And now, she’s back in the UK, where she was born, with a tour alternating between lectures, comedy and a one-woman show, Whistle, which tackles the childhoods of second-generation Holocaust children who often felt “invisible” growing up in the shadows of their parents’ grief and trauma. 

Galron’s tour, sponsored by WZO-UK, starts next week and takes in London, Dublin, Manchester, Cambridge and Leeds. It’s a mixture of lectures, mainly on feminist themes, and workshops.