The play-within-a-play comes across as especially powerful, blurring rehearsal and reality of the Nazi takeover of Norway until the stage is overtaken by the very war it tries to process. The writing is spare and not melodramatic, allowing the final image of handing the rifle to the son to land with devastating clarity. A compact, deeply felt meditation on the necessity of doing art in the face of catastrophe.
The play-within-a-play comes across as especially powerful, blurring rehearsal and reality of the Nazi takeover of Norway until the stage is overtaken by the very war it tries to process. The writing is spare and not melodramatic, allowing the final image of handing the rifle to the son to land with devastating clarity. A compact, deeply felt meditation on the necessity of doing art in the face of catastrophe.