Become a Member
Theatre

Sarah Goldberg, the theatre star is happy to offend

You know something special is happening in a theatre when the audience start to respond to a play cries of protest.

April 14, 2011 11:08
Goldberg in Clybourne Park

By

John Nathan,

John Nathan

2 min read

You know something special is happening in a theatre when the audience start to respond to a play with gasps of horror, howls of laughter and, as in the case of Clybourne Park, cries of protest too. And smack in the middle of all this excitement was Sarah Goldberg.

"It was like being in a sports stadium. The audience was so raucous," recalls Goldberg of the play's run at the Royal Court before moving to the West End's Wyndham's Theatre. "People's reactions were so extreme, ranging from gasps, to screams, to heckles. "We were all stunned. We all came off shaking."

The 25-year-old Canadian first arrived in London seven years ago in the hope of carving out an acting career. Now she has two major roles in Bruce Norris's award-winning comic drama, a politically incorrect examination of modern attitudes towards race.

In the play's first half, set in 1959, she plays the dutiful, meek, Betsy, the deaf and heavily pregnant wife of Karl (Stephen Campbell Moore). He is the kind of old-school, white, suburban bigot most of us like to think died out with the Black and White Minstrel Show.

To get more from Life, click here to sign up for our free Life newsletter.