Mar. 11th, 2005

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Last night I went to the Boston Theatre Works production of Homebody/Kabul (Tony Kushner), a play about an English wife and mother (of a grown child), lost in her life and escaping mostly into books, who decides to go to Kabul. Alone, in 1998. And vanishes, quite possibly dies. Her husband and daughter follow, to search for her, or her story, an explanation. None of which they get, truly.

What we get is the story of a family slowly gone calmly dysfunctional. Her leaving shakes the boat, and shows more of how things have gone wrong. And we get that story in the context of a city, a country gone wrong, as the fabled valley city of the Hindu Kush is now a partial ruin ruled by the iron fist of the Taliban.

It's a very interesting play, with wonderful use of language. The woman starts the play with a monologue that had more underused words than I could shake a stick at. She claims it's due to reading too many books :-). Fascinating, precise, polysyllabic confections rarely invited off the page, into the mouth, and they come trippingly off her tongue. She realizes that they obscure as well as illuminate, however (I kept wishing I could get a copy of the dialogue, to savor the words longer. And I can't remember all the lovely lines and turns of phrase that sparkled and wanted me to take them home.). And later in the play, once the setting has shifted to Kabul (in 1998), the languages vary, shifting to French, a bit of German, what I presume is Farsi and/or Pushto, even Esperanto, mostly translated for the less linguistically talented among us.

The program includes a lot of information about the Taliban rule, the history of Afghanistan, and its culture. The play provides more, and puts it in context. I found it unpleasant (as a woman I would be in a horrible situation were I there), but a bit familiar, having read not dissimilar things in Persepolis. And that side of the play worked, completely (to my reasonably uninformed eyes, anyway). The story of the family was not quite as fully fleshed out. I understood why she left the husband, but it wasn't as clear about the daughter, really. Merely touched upon early in the play, it becomes more central as the play continues, and the one note harped upon doesn't become a full explanation, to me, anyway. Still, a very intense, thoughtful, and thought-provoking play, well worth the time (almost three hours including intermissions).

Also, thinking a bit more, now, there are the questions of home, as well. What makes a home homey, a support, rather than a prison? Can someone from a wholly other place make a new place home? How quickly can that happen? Is home a place, or a set of connections with people, or a particular combination of the two? If two people swapped places, would it be home for either of them? What about the families involved? And so on.

costumes and set )
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In the last week or so I've seen a couple of other plays, too; I've been remiss.

So. I went to the BU production of The Rimers of Eldritch )

The other play was at the Loeb Ex, Three Tall Women )
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The library is closing! This is a good thing; the main branch will open in a couple of years once the new building is built. I hadn't realized construction was starting so soon, though. I'll have to remember to stop by the library in Central.

The last day the main branch is open is Sunday, and there's a party from 2:30 to 4.


As of this morning, all I knew about my Shabbat food was challah and mushroom-barley-beef stew (I'd say soup, but "beef soup" just sounds wrong. "Beef stew" or nothing, somehow.). I stopped at Harvest, looking for barley and inspiration for the rest of the meal, and found it.

The menu:
wheat-barley challah rolls
mushroom-barley-beef stew (with dinosaur kale, carrots, and a white sweet potato, too)
roasted potatoes and onions
roasted eggplant and halved grape tomatoes
stewed strawberries and raspberries with dumplings


Due to a stroke of serendipity, last night I got a(n architectural) tour of the Boston Public Library. Shortened, due to time constraints, but still fascinating. I hadn't realized that it was the first public library in the country (not that I'm surprised, but still), nor that the architect of the new (older half of the current main library) building had not only taken enormous care with the details of the building, but had realized it would need to be expanded, and built something with expansion potential.

I hadn't taken the time to look at the building itself before. There are gorgeous mosaics, impressive quantities (and colors) of marbles, and some wonderful murals. The three that we saw were the nine muses (graces?), Sir Galahad's quest for the grail (in a wonderfully medieval room that cries out for an SCA event), and the triumph of religion (by John Singer Sargent), which was enormously impressive, though some of the panels were not to my, er, religious taste. I was surprised to see Hebrew in this one, including the Name. In fact, there's the bracha for getting an aliyah above one of the panels, which was completely unexpected.

And there were the anecdotes, of major donors, of schoolchildren, and so on. There wasn't nearly enough time to see everything; I shall have to return.


Shabbat shalom!

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