JUDENFREI
Love
and death in Hitler’s Germany
by Kate Glover
Directed
by
Tom
Scott
This
moving play chronicles the passionate love story and the desperate dilemma of
two gifted young people, who just happen to be Jews, as well as the
extraordinary contrast between the reactions of their families to this
predicament in the terrifying world of Nazi
Germany.
Hanna and Philipp,
two lawyers in their thirties, are in love. The problem is that they are Jewish
lawyers in the
Berlin
of 1938. Hitler has prohibited all
Jewish lawyers except World War 1 veterans from practising.
Philipp was in the trenches as a teenager so he thinks he is all right,
but he is terrified for the safety of the brilliant and impulsive Hanna who
refuses to be prudently inconspicuous. He
tries to persuade her to flee to safety. He
promises that he can get her a visa to Cuba. She, however, refuses to leave without her manipulative mother Elisabeth and
her feckless sister Anita. One
night, in November 1938, Philipp receives a mysterious telephone call from a
total stranger. It is obviously a
coded warning. Philipp’s dying father and altruistic sister urge him to leave
that night. It is a call which will change all their lives.
Philipp does flee,
albeit unwillingly. Hanna,
forced to stay on, witnesses the terror of Kristallnacht. Her quality of life
deteriorates as she has to take on menial jobs to support Elisabeth and Anita.
In November 1941 she receives what she has been waiting for - three visas for
Cuba. But it is too late: the order has already come for her and her family to be
deported from Berlin. In the final scene, Philipp, safe
in New York, grieves for Hanna and for his family.
He grieves for the fact that he was not
there to say Kaddish for them and he resolves to survive and to return to Germany
for their sake.
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