For 30 years, the Mint Theater has specialized in rediscovering plays often unfairly confined to the dustbin of history. In my experience attending nearly 20 of these shows, I’ve found them lovingly and shrewdly presented.
But no
production of this Off-Broadway company has struck me so powerfully as Crooked Cross, which has not been revived in the UK since its 1937 premiere at
London’s Westminster Theatre—and not produced at all in the US till now.
This drama
by British author Sally Carson about the rise of Nazism in the critical
December 1932-summer 1933 period only runs through today, so many readers will
not be able to see it before it closes.
Even so, I
urge you to buy the 1934 novel that she herself expertly
adapted, which Persephone Books republished this past April. And while you’re
at it, buy another copy for friends still open to understanding its message
for today—and, if Persephone gets around to reissuing them, its two sequels: The
Prisoner (1936) and A Traveller Came By (1938).
The drama
has turned up again at a time when, like Germany transitioning from the Weimar
Republic, Americans are unsettled by economic dislocation and a relative loss
of power in the world—and decide to embrace a nationalist leader willing to
break norms and laws at lightning speed.
A
publisher’s reader and dance teacher when the novel and play of Crooked
Cross were created, Carson had little time to establish herself in the
literary world. Starting a family in 1938, she died of breast cancer only three
years later, only aged 38.
By that
time, the world was so caught up in maelstrom of fighting the Axis powers that
it forgot about the English Cassandra whose warnings were disregarded by a
war-weary electorate and appeasers in Whitehall.
Crooked
Cross starts like
a Christmas romantic comedy, with Lexa Kluger, a vibrant twentysomething woman
hanging ornaments with her parents, two brothers and her fiancée, Moritz
Weissmann, in their Bavarian home.
Over nine scenes, the tone becomes more like a thriller or horror film,
with lives at stake and darkness spreading over their picturesque mountain community
of Kranach and their country.
Carson
outlines, step by step, how large national events shatter this harmony. Moritz
loses his promising job as a doctor in a prestigious hospital because of his
Jewish background and teaching first aid to a Marxist audience. Moritz’s father
is not only dismissed from his university job because of his religion but is
seized and disappeared by the newly empowered Nazi regime.
The trends
highlighted by Carson will seem all too familiar to many today:
*A new government that uses the slenderest of pretexts to reduce opposition;
*Nationalist right-wing groups willing to overthrow the government;
*Universities that cravenly yield to government pressure.
But what will
especially strike a chord with modern audiences is Carson’s psychological
understanding of what gives rise to authoritarianism, and the divisions it
causes in families.
The
Klugers react differently over how to deal with the ascendant Nazi Party. Frau
Kluger (played by Katie Firth) nags her husband into joining it. Their son
Erich (played with chilling authority by Jakob Winter) embraces Hitler’s
principles and strategies with fanatical devotion, while second brother Helmy (Gavin
Michaels), though closer to Lexa and Mauritz, swallows his ambivalence in the
hope that the party will provide income and a purpose that’s been missing from
his life.
Lexa will
have none of this. She struggles to make her family grasp the dangers posed by
Nazism to the man she loves—and when they urge her to transfer her affection to
a nice Aryan youth, Otto, she moves from tense, even barbed, remarks (e.g.,
telling Erich, a former ski instructor whose work with aging female customers
involved more than athletics, “I don’t imagine the Storm Troopers are immune to
your charms”) to an outbreak break with them all.
Crooked
Cross now plays to
audiences passing an awareness of outcomes that British theatergoers of the
prewar period could not have possessed, and it is staged now without imposing
such retrospective historical knowledge.
In light
of that, Carson’s insights are all the more prophetic and prescient,
particularly in the damage caused by a nihilistic rejection of imperfect but
irreplaceable representative government. Lexa’s question to her siblings
reverberates as much now as in the 1930s: “When you’ve broken everything you
can touch, all of you — what do you think you’ll do then?”

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