

The Golem (Wolff)
Ruth Wolff
A traveling Jewish theatrical troup encounters a government emissary when they perform their original play based on the classic story of the golem in a small town in Czarist Russian.
Is the play subversive?
It's performed in Yiddish though the audience hears English, so the Russian official must rely on an actor to translated for him.
He is fed a humorously softened version of the witty allegory about government interference with the arts.
Eventually dissension breaks out between those actors who want to give the defiant play as it is written and those who want to do an inoffensive comedy.
"A confident, carefully thought out work [that] translates Brechtian distancing techniques into a deceptively chipper American style."
— The New York Times
"Fiercely topical, hugely theatrical and unnervingly funny."
— Variety
| Character |
|---|
| ZEBI the comic star. |
| ZAVEL his younger brother, who is-due to recent events- a psychopath |
| ZEIZEL their uncle, who plays- among others- the Rabbi |
| ENZO a cousin, who is very big, and plays the Golem |
| VASHA wife of Zebi, who plays - among others- the wife of Zebi |
Vilna's Got a Golem is a comedy play written by Ernest Joselovitz and published by Samuel French .
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