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Theatre

How to have a West End hit - be guided by tikkun olam

Hugely successful theatre producer Marla Rubin says she uses Talmudic wisdom to decide which shows to stage.

December 29, 2011 11:28
Festen, in which a son challenges an abusive patriach. Rubin's plays \"celebrate characters who have guts\"

By

John Nathan,

John Nathan

4 min read

Marla Rubin is sitting in a Covent Garden cafe with a big mug of hot chocolate and an even bigger dose of jet lag.

A series of remarkable milestones have led the Canadian-born theatre producer to this moment of calm. The most recent was in New York when she and her stellar cast of Samuel L Jackson and Angela Bassett celebrated the opening night of The Mountaintop on Broadway. Another was in 2009, at the show's first night at Theatre 503 - a venue above a south London pub. During the curtain call Rubin wondered if the play was as "amazing" as she thought it was. She went to the after-show party, met the play's little-known American writer, Katori Hall, and set in motion its transfer to the West End.

A few months later, along came the proof of The Mountaintop's heft. It beat runaway favourites Jerusalem and Enron to win the Olivier Award for best new play. For Rubin, this was perhaps the greatest milestone of them all - especially after having come away empty-handed when her first play, Festen, was nominated for a record five Oliviers five years earlier.

She will never forget the night she won. "I sat there in utter disbelief. All I could think was: 'That's a very strange way to pronounce Jerusalem'," she says.

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