The
decision by a
New York
theatre to cave in to pressure over our play shows how the scope for free
debate has narrowed
Katharine
Viner
Wednesday March 1, 2006
Guardian
The
flights for cast and crew had been booked; the production schedule delivered;
the press announcement drafted and approved; tickets advertised on the
internet. The
Royal Court
production of My Name Is Rachel Corrie, the play I co-edited with Alan
Rickman, was transferring next month to the New York Theatre Workshop, home of
the groundbreaking musical Rent, following two sellout runs in
London
and several awards.
We
always thought that it was a piece of work that needed to be seen in the
US
. Created from the journals and emails of American activist Rachel Corrie,
telling of her journey from her adolescent life in Seattle, Washington, to her
death under a bulldozer in Gaza at the age of 23, we considered it, in a
sense, to be an American story, which would have a particular relevance for
audiences in Rachel's home country. After all, she had made her journey to the
Middle East in order "to meet the people who are on the receiving end of
our [American] tax dollars", and she was a killed by a US-made bulldozer.
But
last week the New York Theatre Workshop cancelled the production - or, in
their words, "postponed it indefinitely". The political climate, we
were told, had changed dramatically since the play was booked. As James
Nicola, the theatre's artistic director, said yesterday: "In our
pre-production planning and our talking around and listening in our
communities in New York, what we heard was that after Ariel Sharon's illness
and the election of Hamas in the recent Palestinian elections, we had a very
edgy situation." Rachel was to be censored for political reasons.
It
makes you wonder. If a young, middle-class, scrupulously fair-minded, and
dead, American woman, whose superb writing about her job as a mental health
worker, ex-boyfriends, troublesome parents, struggle to find out who she
wanted to be, and how she found that by traveling to Gaza and discovering the
shocking conditions under which the Palestinians live - if a voice like this
cannot be heard on a New York stage, what hope is there for anyone else? The
non-American, the non-white, the non-dead, the oppressed?
Anyone
who sees the play, or reads it, realizes that this is no piece of alienating
agitprop. One night in
London
, a group of American students came to a performance and mobbed us afterwards,
thrilled that they had seen themselves on stage, and who they might, in a
different life, have become. Another night, an Israeli couple, members of the
rightwing Likud party, on holiday in
Britain
, were similarly impressed. "The play wasn't against
Israel
, it was against violence," they told Cindy Corrie, Rachel's mother. I
was particularly touched by a young Jewish New Yorker, from an Orthodox
family, who said that he had been nervous about coming to see My Name Is
Rachel Corrie, because he had been told that both she and it were viciously
anti-Israel. But he had been powerfully moved by Rachel's words and realized that he had, to his alarm, been dangerously misled.
But
the director of the
New York
theatre told the New York Times yesterday that it wasn't the people who
actually saw the play he was concerned about. "I don't think we were
worried about the audience," he said. "I think we were more worried
that those who had never encountered her writing, never encountered the piece,
would be using this as an opportunity to position their arguments." Since
when did theatre come to be about those who don't go to see it? If the play
itself, as Mr Nicola clearly concedes, is not the problem, then isn't the
answer to get people in to watch it, rather than exercising prior censorship?
With freedom of speech now at the top of the international agenda, and George
Clooney's outstanding Good Night, and Good Luck reminding us of the dangers of
not standing up to witch-hunts, Americans should not be denied the right to
hear Rachel Corrie's words - words that only two weeks ago were deemed
acceptable.
I'd
heard from American friends that life for dissenters had been getting worse -
wiretapping scandals, arrests for wearing anti-war T-shirts, Muslim professors
denied visas. But it's hard to tell from afar how bad things really are. Here
was personal proof that the political climate is continuing to shift
disturbingly, narrowing the scope of free debate and artistic expression. What
was acceptable a matter of weeks ago is not acceptable now. The
New York
theatre's claim that the arrangement was tentative is absurd: the truth is
that its management has caved in to political pressure, and the reputation of
the arts in
New York
is the poorer for it.
It
is surely underestimating the curiosity and robustness of the American public,
many of whom would no doubt be interested in an insight into the reality of
occupation that led to the Hamas victory. Artistic communities need to resist
the censorship of voices that go against the grain of George Bush's
America
, rather than following the Fox News agenda and gagging them before they have
even been heard.
·
My Name Is Rachel Corrie will now be shown at the Playhouse theatre in
London
's
West End
from March 28; booking number 0870 060 6631
k.viner@guardian.co.uk
Guardian
Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2006