![]() ![]() ![]() “I tried a version just concentrating on the trial, and I thought it was kind of flat and not really getting at the issues of why this was shocking. “I didn’t just see this as a play about the obscenity trial,” Vogel said. She would direct it, and I would write it.” “Fast forward 20 or 30 years, and I get a call from Rebecca Taichman, who for a directing project had directed a performance of the ‘God of Vengeance’ obscenity trial … and she asked if I’d like to work with her. “It was an important play for me to read.” “I read ‘God of Vengeance’ when I was 22 years old, and it always stayed with me,” said Vogel in an interview. In 1907, “God of Vengeance” was called filthy, immoral and, yes, indecent for its content - and that’s where Vogel’s investigation into the play’s history begins. The play in question? Sholem Asch’s “God of Vengeance,” which in 1907 became the subject of Yiddish newspaper headlines in New York due to the play’s strikingly contemporary lesbian plot line. The story then begins as we meet Lemml, the stage manager, who promises to tell us a story about the play that changed his life. That opening moment is a haunting image - a troupe of actors coated in dust, seemingly lost to history before this instant. ![]() “From ashes they rise,” opens Paula Vogel’s play “Indecent,” at the CAA Theatre on Yonge Street starting this Friday. ![]()
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