The Subversive Theatre Collective:

Theater for the 99%
Subversive Theatre: Where pissing you off is only the beginning

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  "The Arts are the 
locale for a kind of guerilla warfare . . . they're subtle so the Establishment gambles that they won't lead to anything threatening.     
   But the Establishment often loses that gamble." 

-Howard Zinn
2003

About the Author 

Emanuel "Manny" Fried

     Since 1913, Emanuel "Manny" Fried has led an extraordinary and inspiring life that encompassed a career as a radical union organizer and a political activist as well as a theatre performer and internationally recognized playwright.
     Born and raised on Buffalo's East Side, Manny began factory work in his late teens.  Traveling back and forth between Buffalo and New York City throughout the 1920s and 30s, he launched an impressive acting career under the stage name "Edward Mann" working with many of the most respected names of the American Theatre including Lee Strasburg, Elia Kazan, Clifford Odets, and John Garfield.  
     Deeply influenced by the militant labor movement of the 1930s, he left his life as an actor behind to become the Western New York Regional Organizer for the radical union United Electric (UE) in 1941.  An outspoken labor leader, Manny led multiple drives to organize whole sections of the working people of Buffalo and even ran for Congress with the American Labor Party in 1948.

Click below for more info...
-- About the Author
-- About the Cast
-- About the Crew
-- About this Play's Production History
-- Directions to the Theater
-- Playwright's Notes
-- Production Photos
-- Return to the DROP HAMMER Mainpage
-- Subversation Sundays
 
PRESS COVERAGE:
-- Buffalo News Review 11/15/08
-- Online Buffalo Review 11/27/08
-- Artvoice Mag Review 12/11/08
-- Download Interview with Director Kurt Schneiderman on ThinkTwice Radio
 
RELATED INFORMATION:
-- About Our Annual "Workers' Power Play Series"

The Most Dangerous Man in Western New York!
     With the rise of McCarthyism in the 1940s and 1950s, Manny was increasingly under attack for his openly left-wing political beliefs and his militant stand for the rights of labor.  In 1955, the local Jesuit priest Father Clancy called for a boycott of Manny's wife's restaurant, the Park Lane, asserting that Manny was "the most dangerous man in Western New York!"
    
Twice called before the House on Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) -- first in 1956 and then again in 1960 -- he defiantly refused to answer questions proclaiming the Committee to be un-Constitutional.
     In 1956, Manny was maneuvered out of his position in UE.  Blacklisted, he was unable to find work in the United States for the next sixteen years.  As late as 1966, the FBI publicly branded Manny Fried as "a symbol of the left that must be broken."

The Return to The Theatre.
    
Throughout the 1970s, 80s, and 90s, Manny resumed his work in the theatre performing and writing an extensive body of plays many of which chronicle his personal experiences in the labor movement.  His plays include BIG BEN HOOD, BROTHER GORSKI, and COCOON.  His most successful work, DODO BIRD, is still performed around the world . . . and recently enjoyed it's fourth rendition here in Buffalo.
     As an actor, Manny has appeared on practically every stage in town winning the Award for Outstanding Actor in the Buffalo United Artists' VISITING MR. GREEN and achieving much notoriety in Studio Arena's productions of TWELVE ANGRY MEN, GOLFING WITH ALAN SHEPPARD, and -- most recently -- TUESDAYS WITH MORRIE.

And That Catches Us Up To Today.
     Now 95-years-young, Manny still teaches creative writing at the State University College at Buffalo where he is proudly a member of the union United University Professions (UUP), Local 2190.
     In a recent interview, he summed up his philosophy of life in six beautifully blunt and fiery words: "Don't let the SOBs get you!"

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