Life

Interview: Danny Braverman

Love, art and fish-balls - writer draws on his East East heritage

June 19, 2014 12:04
A living wage: Danny Braverman’s great-uncle Ab drew on the back of his salary envelope

By

John Nathan,

John Nathan

4 min read

Danny Braverman is drawing his family tree. Above the branches supporting his sister and beyond that his parents and grandparents, the tree veers sharply to the left to include the two people who are central to his one man show Wot? No Fish!! - great-aunt and uncle, Celie and Ab.

The branches below the couple stop at their two boys - Larry, who was disabled and spent most of his life in a hospital, and Jeff, who was gay. So because Ab and Celie had no grandchildren, when Jeff died his effects went to Braverman's mother. Among them were the drawings that Ab did every week on the back of wage packets. There were 3,000 of them stored in shoe boxes under Jeff's bed.

One day, Braverman wondered if they might make a show. He sifted through them and slowly the story emerged of an unremarkable marriage documented in a most remarkable way - and of life in the Jewish East End where Ab and Celie used to live. The result, playing at the Battersea Arts Centre next month, has become a mini-theatrical phenomenon which is also bound for America and Australia. There's a book planned, too.

"It has changed my life," says Braverman who lectures on community theatre at Goldsmiths College. As we walk through the bustle and bedlam of Dalston's Ridley Road market, past stalls retailing dried meat of doubtful provenance, filled flatbreads and thawing fish staring out of polystyrene boxes, Braverman explains that this is where Celie used to do her Shabbat shopping even after she and Ab moved to north-west London.

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