Synopsis
Old Wicked Songs
Published by Dramatists Play Service
2 Male 0 Female
He is assigned to an elderly vocal teacher, Professor Josef Mashkan, who gives Stephen the "Dichterliebe" song cycle by Robert Schumann. Although Stephen resents having to study simple vocal accompaniment, he slowly realizes that he is in the hands of a master-teacher
It's a grudging realization at best for Stephen, as he and Mashkan approach each other from such opposite ends of experience. It seems impossible at first that they will ever get along, much less work together
Their dichotomies abound: One is European, one American; one old-fashioned, the other modern; one passionate, the other technically precise; and finally, one a seeming anti-Semite, and the other a Jew - a theme partly expressed by the play's allusions to Kurt Waldheim's campaign for Austria's presidency
When Stephen visits Dachau, at the insistence of his Jewish parents, the whitewash of official German history fills him with rage, and he channels this anger into his art - and against Mashkan as well
Stephen soon discovers that Mashkan's anti-Semitic remarks mask a darker history; he is a Holocaust survivor who would rather die than confront his demons. Stephen urges Mashkan to tell his story - for his sake as well as for Stephen's-but eventually, only music-their one common bond - helps release the burning emotions of the teacher and helps melt the frigidity of the student
"Mr Marans' play is lighted with warmth and humor, and his two protagonists are splendid companions for the evening's journey into the soul" ~ NY Times
" one of the best plays of the year, a fascinating exploration of art, guilt, compassion and identity " ~ NY Post
"A vivid, beautiful play!" ~ NY Daily News