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Theatre preview: Smile Upon Us Lord at the Barbican

How did John Nathan end up leading Russian revellers in the hora at a Moscow nightclub? Read on...

February 8, 2018 17:17
Cast members in Smile Upon Us, Lord
5 min read

Three Jews travel by horse and cart from their village to Vilnius. This is the simple premise of Smile Upon Us, Lord, the latest production by Russia’s Vakhtangov State Academic Theatre, which arrives at London’s Barbican Theatre on February 28.

Based on writings by Lithuanian Jewish novelist Grigory Kanovich, it’s not an obvious choice for the Vakhtangov, one of Russia’s grandest playhouses. Onegin and Chekhov are more their style.

Subsidised to the hilt by the state — as are nearly all Russian theatres —the Vakhtangov today has six stages. Founded in 1921, the institution has been a constant during the great eras of tumult, change and tyranny that have swept Russia ever since. The building is a palatial colonnaded edifice on Moscow’s pedestrianised Arbat Street, aka the Arbat, the main drag through one of Moscow’s oldest districts.

When I and three other British journalists, Viv, Nick and Andrzej, visited the theatre last month, the Arbat had a festive feel. Stalls sold food and souvenirs celebrating the coming Russian Christmas. The story of three Jewish men travelling from their shtetl to Vilnius because the son of one of them attempted to assassinate the city’s governor was not exactly seasonal programming. Yet still the public came to this three-hour epic and most Jewish of shows.

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