Become a Member
David Aaronovitch

ByDavid Aaronovitch, David Aaronovitch

Opinion

Why I was cast as Joseph, lone Jew in the stable

There was a leading role for David Aaronovitch in his nursery school's nativity play. But why?

December 27, 2018 12:04
Nativity play, complete with a blonde angel
3 min read

Like many readers, I suspect, there aren’t many pictures of me as a child that are not school photographs. There are the class pictures — one face among the three rows of fellow pupils, all in best clothes. There are the portrait shots that parents bought at low price, as otherwise they would probably have had no visual record of their offspring, since decent cameras were still scarce. And then, finally, there are the school performances.

I have just one of those. It’s in colour and it’s of a school Nativity play. And let me explain that those were the days when being secular meant not going to a faith school and not going to a faith school meant experiencing default Anglicanism in normal school. This was actually a nursery school in north London, and we were all aged about three.

At that age no one actually has talent, except possibly an Infant Prodigy, but there were none of those. So casting for school plays for very young children is essentially a political act. The chief angel, for example, perched on a stool with a star on her head, wings and her arms raised high above her classmates, was the daughter of a famous politician and the only parental celebrity. Job done.

There were three kings, a few shepherds, a pair of subordinate angels (parents insignificant), Mary of course, and me — and I was Joseph. Prematurely aged, I look gloomily out from underneath what was supposed to be a Middle Eastern head-dress. Even at three I was not taken in by the idea that this was the infant Messiah lying inert and plastic in the “crib”, whatever that was. My family did not believe in God.