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| Blood
Libel (1991) |
| (11
actors play 34 characters: 3w 8m) |
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| SYNOPSIS |
In 1144 a young boy, WILLIAM,
was found brutally murdered in Thorpe Wood, Norwich. The Jews
were accused of slaughtering a Christian child to use his
blood for Passover and mock the crucifixion. This is the genesis
of the first ever 'blood libel' accusation - a calumny which
has spread throughout Europe and persists to this day. The
Prior of the Norwich Priory, ELIAS, did not believe the accusation.
The charge was dropped. Twenty years later the monk, THOMAS
OF MONMOUTH, joined the priory and, together with the zealous
priory monks, campaigned to have WILLIAM named a martyr. They
succeeded. Pilgrims came in search of miracles. The church
grew rich. WILLIAM's death would today be known for what it
almost certainly was in the 12th century - a crime of sexual
assault. Blood Libel repeatedly enacts this while playing
out the myth of martyrdom - a contrapuntal of furious irony. |
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| EXCERPT |
| "The
ecumenical councils pass edict after edict declaring such belief in
Jewish slaughter false, yet such belief persists. I am tired of the
ignorance and stupidity of the simple flock. The simple flock chooses
superstition for which it needs no learning. I am tired, yes, and
full of contempt. Jesus was a Jew steeped in the knowledge of the
wisest laws. Law, learning, mercy, wisdom - these are the pillars
of the Christian faith. They represent all that I cherish in this
damned existence, they are the only hope for hopeless mankind, they
are what formed my life and what in life I informed. I will not bow
to the fevered intoxications of illiterate monks who love more their
image before God than God's meaning to the world." |
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| REVIEWS |
|
Wesker's
steely prose
iimaginatively, shrewdly, powerfully deals with
the legend of
Jews as killers of Christian children
David Nathan, Jewish Chronicle
intriguing
undeniably fascinating
play
Michael Billington, The Guardian |
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| Commissioned to open The Norwich Playhouse. |
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to Synopses index |
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