|
TM
”Primo,” a memoir of Auschwitz by Italian resistance fighter, Primo Levi
Antony Sher gives chilling, moving account of the numbing minutae of evil
By Lucy Komisar
“Primo,” Antony Sher’s chilling adaptation and performance
of the Italian Primo Levi’s memoir of his year in Auschwitz, shows that the
brutally mundane can sometimes be more horrific than the numbing statistics of
victims. His details -- of being beaten with fists and sticks, of being
constantly forced to strip and stand naked for hours, of watching comrades
marched to their deaths, of scrounging for food -- make the numbers glisten with
sweat and blood. The eeriest vision is his description of forced labor details
shuffling off to sprightly German marching tunes.
Sher
is a coolly matter-of-fact Primo, expressing rage quietly rather than shouting
it. He depicts a careful, intellectual approach, almost scientific in its
attention to detail. Levi was a young chemist of 24 when the Germans invaded
Italy in 1943, and he became a partisan fighter.
He was captured and sent to the Auschwitz concentration
camp in Poland, but he was a survivor, and we see in the play how he learned
quickly to use his wits. He discovered the uses of corruption, but also the
importance of friendship and loyalty. He became buddies with another Italian
chemist, and their food-sharing was a life-saver. A camp worker with access to
food was generous to him, another life-saver. Primo found humanity in the midst
of devilish evil. Perhaps, that saved his psyche as well as his body.
I had
visited Buchenwald, the concentration camp north of Weimar, Germany, just weeks
before seeing the play, and the grim, gray stone walls and cells provided a
vivid context for Primo’s litany of humiliations and violence at the hands of SS
officers. A stunning art exhibit on the top floor of the Buchenwald museum, the
former camp storehouse, echoes some of Primo’s lines.
In the play, Primo talks about how life often depended on
the shoes one got. Prisoners’ shoes were taken away, and they were given
ill-fitting wooden-soled footware that brought sores to their feet and made them
hobble. Death came quickly if one could not move fast enough for the overseers.
One
of the works in the exhibit by Jozef Szajna shows a sandal carelessly thrown
among some cutout silhouettes crafted from hundreds of victims’ . Szajna’s
own life in the war years resembles Primo’s. He was an opposition fighter of 19
when he was arrested by the Nazis and sent to Auschwitz and Buchenwald. Primo
and Szajna lived, and so will their art.
The direction by Richard Wilson assures the dignity of the
piece, eschewing melodrama. The mottled grays walls of the set, set off only by
a brown wood chair, reinforce the sense of overwhelming dreariness and death.
“Primo.” Adapted by and starring Antony Sher. Based on the
memoir, “If This is a Man” by Primo Levi. Directed by Richard Wilson. Presented
by the National Theatre of Great Britain.
The Music Box, 239 W. 45 St. Tue - Sat at 8pm; Sat at 2pm;
Sun at 3pm. Runtime 1:30. $76.25 - $86.25, 212-239-6200.
Images of Primo by Ivan Kyncl
Image of Buchenwald by Lucy Komisar
Back to TravelLady Magazine |