ϲʹ

“The Visitor,” to be performed in the Black Box

${$_EscapeTool.xml(headline)}

“The Visitor,” to be performed in the Black Box

“The Visitor,” Carol K. Mack’s play about a German anti-Semite in New York City and the Jewish police officers assigned to protect his right to free speech, will be performed in ϲʹ’s Wien Experimental (Black Box) Theatre at the Quick Center for the Arts, on Tuesday, March 19, 2013, at 8 p.m.

The play takes place in 1895 when Theodore Roosevelt was Police Commissioner of New York City. Herr Ahlwardt, a rabidly anti-Semitic member of the Reichstag, came from Berlin with the announced purpose of “preaching against the Jews” and he demanded protection. Roosevelt assigned a group of Jewish policemen to be his bodyguards and protect his right to freedom of speech. “The Visitor” is about these policemen, this historical event and its significance.

Mack received a commission from Theatre J and the Foundation for Jewish Culture to write the “The Visitor,” and she was greatly assisted by members of the Shomrim Society, an organization of Jewish members of the New York Police Department.

Free and open to the public, this lauded work is co-sponsored by the Bennett Center for Judaic Studies and the American Studies Program. The play will be performed by an all-professional cast, and will be directed by Dr. Martha S. LoMonaco, professor of visual and performing arts. Seating is limited and reservations are necessary. Please call the Bennett Center at (203)-254-4000, ext. 2066.

Mack’s plays, which have been performed all over the world, include “Territorial Rites,” “Postcards,” “Esther,” and “A Safe Place.” They premiered respectively at The American Place Theatre, Ensemble Studio Theatre, The White Barn Theatre Foundation, and The Berkshire Theatre Festival in Association with The Kennedy Center for The Performing Arts. In 2006, she conceived and organized a documentary theatre piece in connection with Vital Voices Global Partnership, an NGO that develops and connects women leaders in 80 countries. With a group of award-winning women playwrights, they wove the collaborative documentary theatre piece, “Seven,” which has been translated into sixteen languages thus far. Her plays have been published in four separate editions of “Best American Short Plays.”

A Weston, Conn. resident, Mack has taught at New York University, Marymount College and Fordham University.

Last modified: 03-05-13 02:31 PM

20130503

Recent News

Alumni & Family Weekend, Oct. 18-20

Read the Article

Stags Vote: Election 2024 Political Discussions & Programs

Read the Article

Hasidic Politics in the U.S.A.: Pre-Election Discussion, Oct. 10

Read the Article

Museum to Host Two Major Events for Sacred Space, Brandywine Exhibition

Read the Article

Cheers to '42 Brew: Elicit Brewing Company Debuts New Alumni-Inspired Beer

Read the Article

Lecture on Communicating Catholicism via Social Media, Oct. 16

Read the Article

Seventh Annual Parents & Family Challenge, Oct. 16-22

Read the Article

Search Results