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Theatre

Craig discovers his rubber soul

Playwright Ryan Craig's new play at the Hampstead Theatre is about an immigrant Jewish family's business

March 20, 2017 15:25
Filthy Business, Hampstead Theatre. Photo by Dominic Clemence.
2 min read

Playwright Ryan Craig is used to tackling weighty subjects. His National Theatre play of 2011, The Holy Rosenbergs, drew on Arthur Miller and explored the extent to which the Jewish diaspora is implicated by the actions of the Israel Defence Forces; his version of Polish playwright Tadeusz Slobodzianek’s searing drama Our Class dealt with the slaughter of Jews by their Polish neighbours during the Holocaust, while The Glass Room pre-empted the Rachel Weisz movie Denial by looking at Holocaust revisionism. For his latest play, which is at the Hampstead Theatre and is directed by the venue’s Edward Hall, he is tackling, well, rubber. The stuff weighs more than you might think.

“It is heavy and it makes your clothes, hair and skin dirty,” says Craig whose new, partly autobiographical play Filthy Business stars Sara Kestelman as a first-generation Jewish immigrant Yetta Solomon who battles to keep the family concern going across three generations.

“I’ve been trying to write this kind of family business drama for years because of my own family history,” he adds. “They started this rubber company. It was a classic story of immigration from eastern Europe: no money, no skills, yet somehow having to build something of your own to survive and make a life. It was a world within in a world; a state within a state. And this is what Yetta does in the play.”

Craig is at pains to say that the play is fiction. But the territory in which he sets it is straight out of his father’s shop on the Holloway Road.

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