The Subversive Theatre Collective:
Where Dissent Takes Center Stage!
Subversive Theatre: Where pissing you off is only the beginning

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  "I am incapable of devoting myself quietly to creative work while blood is flowing and everything is calling me to battle.  I want to burn with the spirit of the times.  I want all servants of the stage to recognize their lofty destiny.   
    I am disturbed at my comrades' failure to raise above narrow caste interests which are alien to the interests of society at large.  Yes, the theatre can play an enormous part in the transformation of the whole of existence." 

-Vsevolod Meyerhold
1901
 
Click below for more info...
-- About the Cast & Crew
-- Return to the MY NAME IS RACHEL CORRIE Mainpage
-- Rehearsal Photos
 
PRESS COVERAGE:

-- Buffalo News Preview 3/7/08
-- Buffalo News Review 3/9/08
 
RELATED INFORMATION:
-- Myths & Facts about Rachel Corrie from ISM
-- Rachel's Father's interview with Democracy Now!
-- Alan Rickman fights censorship
-- The play about the censorship of MY NAME IS RACHEL CORRIE
-- Rachel's Mother's open letter to the Boston Globe

Related Information for

MY NAME IS RACHEL CORRIE

The following is a reprint of an article from the British newspaper the Guardian by correspondent Julian Borger that appeared February 28, 2006.

Rickman slams 'censorship' of play about US Gaza activist

A New York theatre company has put off plans to stage a play about an American activist killed by an Israeli bulldozer in Gaza because of the current "political climate" - a decision the play's British director, Alan Rickman, denounced yesterday as "censorship".

James Nicola, the artistic director of the New York Theatre Workshop, said it had never formally announced it would be staging the play, My Name is Rachel Corrie, but it had been considering staging it in March.

"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, we had a very edgy situation," Mr Nicola said.

"We found that our plan to present a work of art would be seen as us taking a stand in a political conflict, that we didn't want to take."

He said he had suggested a postponement until next year.

Mr Rickman, best known for his film acting roles in Love, Actually and the Harry Potter series and who directed the play at London's Royal Court Theatre, denounced the decision.

"I can only guess at the pressures of funding an independent theatre company in New York, but calling this production "postponed" does not disguise the fact that it has been cancelled," Mr Rickman said in a statement.

"This is censorship born out of fear, and the New York Theatre Workshop, the Royal Court, New York audiences - all of us are the losers."

Rachel Corrie was a 23-year-old activist from Washington state crushed in March 2003 when she put herself between an Israeli army bulldozer and a Palestinian home it was about to demolish in Rafah, on the Egyptian border.

The International Solidarity Movement, of which she was a member, claimed the bulldozer driver ran her over deliberately. The Israeli Defence Forces said it was an accident, and that she was killed by falling debris.

The Israeli government said the demolitions were aimed at creating a "security zone" along the border. The Palestinians say they are a form of collective punishment.

"Rachel Corrie lived in nobody's pocket but her own. Whether one is sympathetic with her or not, her voice is like a clarion in the fog and should be heard," Mr Rickman said.

My Name is Rachel Corrie consists of her diary entries and emails home, edited by Mr Rickman and Katharine Viner, features editor of The Guardian. It won the best new play prize at this year's Theatregoers' Choice Awards in London.

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