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What not to miss over the next 12 months

JC critics reveal what they are most looking forward to in 2009

December 30, 2008 16:08
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By

Alex Kasriel,

Alex Kasriel

2 min read

There is a lot to look forward to in 2009. The Ben Uri Gallery in London (www.benuri.org.uk) starts the year with an exhibition exploring works by artists who came to this country as refugees from Nazism. It follows that with a show of drawings by leading Jewish sculptor Jacques Lipchitz in May. Both should be well worth visiting. In February, the Wallace Collection (www.wallacecollection.org) will be displaying two hoards of medieval gold and silver jewellery found at Colmar in France and Erfurt in Germany, probably buried by Jewish families who were expelled from those cities. Fans of the Middle Ages will also want to head to the London Jewish Cultural Centre (www.ljcc.org.uk) in May, when it exhibits a selection of medieval Jewish artefacts. But it is not until the autumn that the most anticipated shows of the year will take place — when the Royal Academy (www.royalacademy.org.uk) is devoting exhibitions to two major Jewish sculptors, Anish Kapoor and Jacob Epstein.

Julia Weiner

One of the things I’m looking forward to is Richard Dreyfus in Complicit at the Old Vic (www.oldvictheatre.com) later this month. An added attraction is that this production of Joe Sutton’s play about Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Ben Kritzer and his fight to preserve civil liberties is being directed by the theatre’s artistic director, Kevin Spacey. At the Duke of York’s Theatre (www.ambassadortickets.com) in the West End, Lindsay Posner is directing A View from a Bridge, Arthur Miller’s acclaimed drama about an Italian immigrant family in New York. It opens in January and runs until May. The British immigrant experience is examined at the National Theatre (www.nationaltheatre.org.uk) in Richard Bean’s England People Very Nice, about several generations of migrants to London’s East End, including the wave of Jewish refugees. Nicholas Hytner directs. Those who like their Hamlets played by big-name screen actors will be looking forward to May when Jude Law takes his turn in the role in the Donmar’s West End season (www.donmarwarehouse.com).

John Nathan