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Three kosher plays on one London stage

The future of Jewish writing in British theatre is finally looking bright and beautiful, discovers John Nathan

August 10, 2023 16:07
Dorothea Myer-Bennett, Nigel Planer, Caroline Gruber, (c) Lexi Clare (2)
5 min read

The second Emanate season of Jewish plays is about to begin. The first happened almost exactly one year ago when two Jewish drama graduates Dan Wolff and Sam Thorpe-Spinks came to the view that Jewish writing was not getting a fair showing on British stages.

Motivated in part by the decidedly unfriendly and ignorant attitudes towards Jews they encountered while studying at drama school the two young actors resolved to create a festival of new Jewish writing.

To host it they were given a stage at north London’s Kiln Theatre (actually a platform in front of the venue’s cinema screen). Over two days of sometimes raw but always fizzing theatre, performed in front of packed audiences the works and works-in-progress of Jewish writers were performed by Jewish actors, many of them on the cusp of their careers.

The thrilling result revealed a talent pool of British Jewish theatre practitioners that is as deep as it is rich.  Just as significantly British Jewish playwrights were freed of having to mould their Jewish sensibility to fit a wider theatre culture that is fundamentally incurious about modern Jewish identity.