Minetta Lane Theater

mnirc_banner.jpgThis is the New York premiere of My Name is Rachel Corrie, which became a bit of a cause celebre earlier this year when the planned production at New York Theatre Workshop was canceled. This is the Royal Court production from London. Compiled from writings left behind in the diaries, letters, and e-mails of American activist Rachel Corrie, a 23-year-old protester who was killed by an Israeli bulldozer in Gaza, the play chronicles the human, social, and political evolution in the life and controversial death of a young woman. The play traces the life of Rachel from her early days in Washington State through her experiences as an activist seeking to learn more about the community within Gaza.

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On requests to perform “My Name is Rachel Corrie”

“When I lobby in Washington, D.C., or when Cindy and I give a talk somewhere, I don’t do that for Rachel. I know I can no longer do anything for Rachel, so I do that for the children still living in Gaza. But somehow this play feels different. To me, it is not only by and about Rachel, but also for Rachel.”

— Craig Corrie

MNIRCnew.jpg NOTE: After the New York Theater Workshop “indefinitely postponed” the play My Name is Rachel Corrie, the play’s creators and the Corrie family were flooded with requests to perform it. Both the family and London’s Royal Court Theatre were heartened by such a response from so many people. Here, Craig Corrie responds to some of the requests and why it has been difficult to grant them during the past year.

Please forgive an old actuary, so new to the world of theater and activism, for weighing in where I have so little knowledge or experience, but I would like to express my feelings on two related subjects.First, I thank you all for the wisdom of focusing on the larger questions surrounding the fiasco of the New York Theater Workshop’s cancellation of the New York debut of My Name is Rachel Corrie. The silencing of this play is alarmingly similar to the silencing of almost any voice that speaks out for equal rights for Palestinians, and the silence we have all faced so often when demanding justice from Washington or Jerusalem. (more…)

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Seattle Rep will premiere “My Name…”

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LEO K THEATRE
March 15 – April 22, 2007
Tickets can be purchased via the Seattle Rep web site at www.seattlerep.org or by calling their box office at 206-443-2222 or 1-877-900-9285. Tickets and subscriptions go on sale on April 1st. Tickets range from $10-54.

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Dangerous Ideas, Sinister Forces

By Andrew Ford Lyons
Orginally in The Palestine Chronicle

How quickly we backslide: In June of 1937 the federal government slapped chains and a padlock onto the doors of Maxine Elliot Theatre in New York. It was an attempt to halt a performance of “The Cradle Will Rock,” a Marc Blizstein musical the feds found far too full of dangerous ideas for public consumption. The show’s director, Orson Welles, rushed back from Washington, D.C., on opening day after a failed attempt to convince the government to lift its ban. He found about 600 people waiting to see the performance idling in front of the theater, along with his cast.

(more…)

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The Second Death of Rachel Corrie

March 6, 2006 from Counterpunch

The Second Death of Rachel Corrie

Censorship of the Worst Kind

By VANESSA REDGRAVE

I am urging the Royal Court Theatre to sue the New York Theatre Workshop for the cancellation of the production of “My Name Is Rachel Corrie”. Not because I donated money for this production, which the Royal Court have been fundraising for–a target of 50,000 pounds, underwritten by Alan Rickman.

This is censorship of the worst kind. More awful even than that.It is black-listing a dead girl and her diaries.A very brave and exceptional girl who all citizens, whatever their faith or nationality, should be proud and grateful for her existence. They couldn’t silence her voice while she lived, so she was killed. Her voice began to speak again as Alan Rickman read her diaries, and Megan Dodds became Rachel Corrie.Now the New York Theatre Workshop have silenced that dear voice.

I shall never forget the glimpse, at the close of Alan Rickman’s production, of Rachel when 10 years old, shot on a little family movie camera, making her speech about world poverty and the urgent need to end the misery. The New York Theatre Workshop have silenced that little girl, as well as the girl who confronted the Israeli army Caterpillar bulldozer.

There has to be a court case on the sheer fact of the cancellation of this production. I suppose lawyers were consulted about the word “postponed”. We in the theatre know however what cancelling a production means, whatever words are used. Megan Dodds, and a crew lose their jobs. The Royal Court Theatre lose a production that was a few weeks from opening in New York City.

For the Royal Court Theatre were producing “Rachel Corrie”, with the New York Theatre Workshop, and putting up a lot of money–$100,000 dollars.

I hope that all theatre artists, writers, designers, actors, directors, independent producers and artists’ representatives will make their protests known publicly as well as directly to the New York Theatre Workshop management. I hope that American Actors Equity will be asked to take up and support the Royal Court Theatre producer, Elyse Dodgson, the director, Alan Rickman, and the actress Megan Dodds.

If this cancellation is not transformed into a new production, somewhere in New York, immediately, we would be complicit, all of us, in a catastrophe that must not be allowed to take place. This play is not about taking sides. It is about protecting human beings.

In this case, Palestinian human beings who have no protection, for their families, their homes or their streets.

Rachel Corrie gave her life to protect a family. She didn’t have or use a gun or bomb.

She had her huge humanity, and she gave that to save lives.

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London Playhouse Theater - NYC from March 29 through May 7.

From the New York Times - Though an Off Broadway production of “My Name Is Rachel Corrie” was postponed this week because of concerns about its political content, the sold-out production at the Royal Court Theater in London will move to the West End. Pieced together from Ms. Corrie’s journals and e-mail messages, the solo show by Alan Rickman and Katherine Viner about Ms. Corrie, an American demonstrator killed by an Israeli bulldozer while trying to stop the destruction of a Palestinian home, will open at the Playhouse Theater for 36 performances, from March 28 through May 7.

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