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A new play by Michael Frayn
A man who has everything.
Money, friends, a happy home. And then – pfft! It’s all
vanished.
Max Reinhardt, one of the
greatest impresarios of theatrical history, had a lifelong
ambition – to dissolve the boundary between theatre and
the world it portrays. Each year at the Salzburg festival he
directed a famous morality play, Everyman, about
God sending Death to summon a representative of mankind for
judgment. The victim he chooses is a man who, like
Reinhardt, rejoices in his wealth and all the pleasures that
money can buy.
Then in 1938 Hitler declares
his own day of reckoning and sends Death into Austria –
whereupon Reinhardt, a Jew, is left as naked and vulnerable
as Everyman himself. Michael Frayn’s Afterlife is
the story of how Reinhardt achieves his great ambition;
though in a way he can scarcely have foreseen.
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