Almost A Bird Theatre Collective shows Wolf's Lair
Click to enlarge Traudl Junge was Hitler's personal secretary, her life is explored in Wolf's Lair
Almost A Bird Theatre Collective
(Antigone, Angels in America, A Streetcar Named Desire, Jeff
Koons) presents Wolf’s Lair.
Circa Two >>> Fri 27
Nov – Sat 12 Dec, Tue-Sat 7.30pm & Sun 4.30pm
Book @
Circa >>> 04 801 7992 / http://www.circa.co.nz,
Adult $25/Concession $20
Devised and created by Chapman
Tripp Award Winners Sophie Roberts and Willem Wassenaar.
Performed by Sophie Roberts, directed by Willem Wassenaar.
“Beautifully performed ... A fascinating glimpse
into an ordinary woman trapped in the very centre of the
maelstrom of evil that was Nazi Germany.” (Dominion
Post)
“Immaculate performance ... stunning directing” (Salient)
“Dynamic ... compelling. A consummate performance” (Theatreview)
"Beautiful, thought-provoking theatre ... Amazing ... Flawless" (Theatreview)
"Impressive" (NZ Herald)
"Dazzling ... totally and brutally honest ... A taste of the true New Zealand talent lingering on everyone's lips" (Coup De Main.Com)
The acclaimed Almost A Bird Theatre
Collective (Antigone, Angels in America, A Streetcar Named
Desire, Jeff Koons) performs the return season of their
celebrated devised work Wolf’s Lair at Circa Two in
Wellington, Fri 27 Nov – Sat 12 Dec, Tue-Sat 7.30pm & Sun
4.30pm, (no show on Mon).
Wolf's Lair is a 45-minute
fractured portrait and monologue, about the "unspectacular
life" of a very ordinary woman who found herself in 1942 at
the age of 22 working in Wolfsschanze (Wolf's Lair),
Hitler's headquarters. Performed by Sophie Roberts, directed
by Willem Wassenaar. Germany, 1942. Traudl Junge was a young
woman with dreams of becoming a ballerina. Instead, at 22
years old she became Adolf Hitler's personal secretary. She
served him for two and a half years, until the final days of
World War II when Nazi Germany fell. Traudl Junge was one of
the few survivors to emerge from the Berlin Bunker where
Hitler and many members of his inner circle ended their own
lives. For many years Traudl Junge claimed she had been
blind to the genocidal activities being carried out around
her, it was not until the late 1960s that she began to
confront her past. Over the next 35 years that confrontation
became an increasingly painful process; an exhausting
attempt to understand herself and her motivations as a young
woman. She died in February 2002, shortly after the
publication of her memoir.
Wolf’s Lair is an
examination of the ghosts of one woman's conscience; a woman
who served a mass murderer and yet does not fit into the
polarized territory of the hero's and the villains. This
play, rather than re-enacting her autobiography, shines a
light on the pain and confusion she suffered - not at the
time of the Nazi genocide, but when as an adult she finally
started questioning and accepting her role in what happened
around her.
ENDS