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Theatre

Austrians hated this playwright — the feeling was mutual

Thomas Bernhard targeted the antisemitism of his fellow countrymen.

February 18, 2010 16:21
Thomas Bernhard: generally, Austrians are callous and stupid, he wrote

ByJohn Nathan, John Nathan

3 min read

'If they were honest," says Professor Robert Schuster about his fellow Austrians, "they'd like to gas us today just as they did 50 years ago."

Schuster is the Jewish philosopher character in Heldenplatz, the final play written by Austrian dramatist and novelist Thomas Bernhard, who died in 1989. It arrives at the Arcola Theatre in London this month, and it contains many more of Schuster's observations about his fellow countrymen and women. "Inside every Viennese there is a mass murderer," he says. And: "Generally, Austrians are callous and stupid."

It is not hard to see why the play caused so much offence when it premiered at the Vienna's Burgtheater. And Schuster has an opinion or two about Britain as well. "In Oxford [university] there was and still is antisemitism. It doesn't matter where a Jew goes in Europe, he's hated everywhere."

Set in Vienna, in 1988, the year it premiered, Heldenplatz takes its name from the Viennese square where, on April 2 1938, Hitler announced the Anschluss to ecstatic crowds. Despite the play being set 50 years later, those cheers can still be heard in Bernhard's play, though only by the widow of Professor Schuster's brother, and by the audience.