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Theatre

Puppets, politics and pogroms

A dark new show telling the story of a Jewish activist features 26 characters — and there’s barely a human in sight.

February 26, 2009 11:56
One of the rod-operated puppets in Fabrik: The Legend of M. Rabinowitz

By

Alex Kasriel,

Alex Kasriel

2 min read

Over the past 10 years, puppetry has grown up and moved into the theatre mainstream. Just think of director Nicholas Hytner’s National Theatre hit, His Dark Materials, or the Sesame Street-inspired West End musical, Avenue Q, where the puppets (operated by hands and rods on stage) lead very adult lives and experience very adult emotions.

Now a new puppet show aimed at adults is coming to London, one that has just three actors controlling 26 characters, and is so dark it includes a figure of Adolf Hitler.

Fabrik: The Legend of M. Rabinowitz is being staged by the New York company Wakka Wakka Productions, which has been brought to the UK by the Jewish Community Centre.

The play tells the true story of Jewish businessman Moritz Rabinowitz who moved to the Norwegian town of Haugesund from Poland after the pogroms of 1911.