(Jewish Group) White supremacy takes center stage in a new reimagining of 'The Merchant of Venice'
When William Shakespeare wrote The Merchant of Venice 400 years ago, he had almost certainly never met a Jewish person. In fact, in 1596 or so, when he created the infamous character of Shylock a greedy moneylender who thirsts for a literal pound of flesh from his Christian antagonist, Antonio Jews had been banned from England for nearly 300 years.
Like most of Shakespeares work, The Merchant of Venice which centers on Antonios default on a large loan from Shylock continues to be performed in the present day, despite its reputation as the most vexed single play in the Shakespearean canon, as New York Times film critic A.O. Scott wrote in a 2004 review of the film version starring Al Pacino as Shylock. At the time, Scott noted that the first task of any modern adaptation is to confront the anti-Jewish bigotry that propels its plot and informs its poetry.
In his new play The Shylock and the Shakespeareans, Edward Einhorn confronts that bigotry head on. Now onstage at the New Ohio Theatre in Greenwich Village, the Untitled Theater Company No. 61 production that debuted June 1 and runs through June 17 reimagines The Merchant of Venice from the perspective of Jacob, a Jewish diamond merchant who is called Shylock as a slur. In this new version, while still set in an ancient Venice, of sorts, a group of white supremacists known as the Shakespeareans have co-opted the public discourse, and Jacob finds himself embroiled with them when his daughter falls in love with an Asian immigrant.
Using contemporary events and framing, alongside techniques associated with the Theatre of the Absurd, the play attempts to explore the continuum between the historical and the modern in order to create a conversation about antisemitism as it exists in our current time.
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