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The Jewish Chronicle

Review: Dr Korczak’s Example

A moving Shoah drama, but go easy on the hope

July 9, 2009 15:27
Philip Rham as Janusz Korczak who saved children in the Warsaw Ghetto

By

John Nathan,

John Nathan

3 min read

David Greig’s compact 75-minute play tells the story of Janusz Korczak, the Jewish paediatrician who founded a Jewish orphanage in the Warsaw Ghetto and eventually chose to die with his charges at Treblinka. It was well received at Manchester’s Royal Exchange last year — deservedly so.

The play falls into that genre of drama that has become a niche within a niche — not just a Holocaust play, but a Holocaust play for young audiences.

The objective, achieved so well recently at Hampstead’s New End Theatre by Simon Reade’s adaptation of Michael Morpurgo’s The Mozart Question, is to depict the nightmare without causing young audiences to lose their sleep.

Yet I usually leave these works, carefully constructed to inform but not disturb, with nagging doubts as to whether some lost sleep is not a price worth paying even when performing to pre-teens.