Oslo is a big play
that tackles a very big subject. Playwright J.T. Rogers takes on the secret
negotiations between Palestinians and Israelis fostered by Norwegians that led
to the famous signing of the Oslo Accord on September 13, 1993.
Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Yasser Arafat, the Chairman of
the Palestinian Liberation Organization signed the agreement and the two
implacable enemies shook hands. The ceremony took place at the White House
before President Bill Clinton and the world. Rabin, as quoted by Rogers at the
end of his play, spoke eloquently about Israelis and Palestinians living
together on the same soil. “Enough of blood and tears. Enough” he intoned.
It was an expression of hope only. There is no peace in the region.
The
Company in the Studio 180 Theatre production of OSLO. Photo credit: Cylla von
Tiedemann.
The lead-up to the Oslo Accord did accomplish a number of items that
Rogers enumerates at the end of the play. They are of some interest in the long
and unsuccessful process of solving what appears to be an unsolvable problem.
But the more interesting aspect of the negotiations is that they were done in secrecy
and were started and steered through by low-ranking Norwegians.
Rogers has collected all the information he could get his hands on and
dramatized the proceedings into a coherent political and personal drama. A play
devoted solely to the negotiations, however dramatic and historically interesting,
would be a bore but Rogers steers far from that. He does so by bringing out the
human characteristics of the people involved.
The process is the brainchild of Terje Rød-Larsen (Blair Williams) who
is described without further detail as the Director of the Fafo Institute for
Applied Social Sciences. He is married to Mona Juul (Marla McLean), an official
in the Norwegian Foreign Ministry. They are an attractive, intelligent,
passionate couple who want to do something about the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict. They are criticized for being perhaps dilettantes but they show
passion and ability in keeping the process going.
They set in motion unofficial, secret meetings between Ahmed Quirie
(Sanjay Talwar), the PLO’s Finance Minister and Hassan Asfour (Omar Alex Khan),
a liaison officer of the PLO with Yair Hirschfield (Amitai Kedar) and Ron
Pundak (Jordan Pettle), both professors of economics, not representing Israel because
that would be a crime. But they are negotiating on behalf of peace and the
official and unofficial become blurred.
The political arguments are joined. The Norwegian Foreign Minister Johan
Jorgen Holst (Patrick Galligan) joins the fray as does his wife Marianne (Sarah
Orenstein) and the Deputy Foreign Minister Jan Egeland (Jordan Pettle).
We move up the ladder in the Israeli representation. Israeli Deputy
Foreign Minister Yossi Beilin (Mark McGrinder) is ever present in the
background, Uri Savir (Jonas Chernick), Director-General of the Foreign
Ministry, Joel Singer, a Washington lawyer and advisor to the Foreign Ministry
as well as Shimon Peres, Foreign Minister at the time participate.
Blair Williams & Marla McLean in the Studio 180 Theatre production
of OSLO.
Photo credit: Cylla von Tiedemann.
The negotiations are done away from the audience and we see the negotiations
and the Norwegian enablers outside the negotiating room. These are people with
deep-rooted hatred and mistrust of each other engendered over decades of
murderous conflict. The Israelis consider the PLO members as simple terrorists.
We see anger, aggressiveness, arrogance, braggadocio, grand-standing and
an apparent inability to reach any compromise. But the negotiators with the
help of their hosts start seeing each other as people. They are parents, they
love their children and they want peace. Slowly their humanity affects if it
does not take over their official and intractable positions. They break bread,
as they say, and start finding solutions. The political and the personal are
joined to make fine drama.
Ken Mackenzie’s single set is a brightly lit and elegant-looking anteroom
to the negotiating arena. there is a judicious selection of photographs projected as well.
At two hours and forty-five minutes, including intermission, Oslo covers
a lot of ground and director Joel Greenberg maintains a good pace throughout.
Half a dozen actors take on two roles which is usually not a problem but
in this production there is an exception. Patrick Galligan in addition to being
the Foreign Minister is also the groundsman at the manor where the meetings
take place. Sarah Orenstein doubles as the Minister’s wife and as the cook and housekeeper
at the manor. They look exactly the same in both roles. Annoying.
In the end you get a detailed chapter in the history of the
Israeli-Palestinian attempts at peace and get close to the personal conflicts
and resolutions and a fine night at the theatre.
__________________
Oslo by J.T. Rogers in a
production by Studio 180 opened on February 14 and continues until March 3,,
2019 at the CAA Theatre, 651 Yonge
St. Toronto , Ontario .
www.mirvish.com
No comments:
Post a Comment