MEMOIRS OF A FORGOTTEN MAN

by D.W. Gregory

A Soviet journalist with the gift of total recall. A psychologist seeking to rehabilitate herself. A government censor with a secret past. Over two decades their fates become entwined as victims and collaborators in Stalin’s campaign to rewrite public memory.

Long before ‘fake news’ was an Internet meme, it was called propaganda. And in the Soviet Union, circa 1938, it was the grease that kept Stalin’s...

A Soviet journalist with the gift of total recall. A psychologist seeking to rehabilitate herself. A government censor with a secret past. Over two decades their fates become entwined as victims and collaborators in Stalin’s campaign to rewrite public memory.

Long before ‘fake news’ was an Internet meme, it was called propaganda. And in the Soviet Union, circa 1938, it was the grease that kept Stalin’s machinery of terror in motion. By taking us to this world, where justice is arbitrary and freedom as we think of it does not exist, Memoirs of a Forgotten Man forces the audience to consider the fragility of democracy in an era when facts are fungible and history is whatever Dear Leader says it is.

  • Inquire About Rights
  • Recommend
  • Download
  • Save to Reading List

MEMOIRS OF A FORGOTTEN MAN

Recommended by

  • Terry Moore: MEMOIRS OF A FORGOTTEN MAN

    Lovely, lovely play. The ground keeps shifting under the characters, and therefore for the audience as well. Moments of delight, terror, and loss, and—late in the play—a moment of grace so profound I still tear up remembering it. Great roles. A privilege to work on.

    Lovely, lovely play. The ground keeps shifting under the characters, and therefore for the audience as well. Moments of delight, terror, and loss, and—late in the play—a moment of grace so profound I still tear up remembering it. Great roles. A privilege to work on.

  • Anna Tatelman: MEMOIRS OF A FORGOTTEN MAN

    I saw this at Thalia's Umbrella in February 2024 in Seattle. This is a brilliantly constructed play. The way it layers both the tensions and the mergings between the past and present, the personal and the political, is so richly and carefully done, yet in such a way that you won't realize on a first watch/read. Although some of the particulars of the Soviet Union may feel alien, the fear, paranoia, and constant-tip-toeing around a government caught between lies and all-consuming control is far too familiar.

    I saw this at Thalia's Umbrella in February 2024 in Seattle. This is a brilliantly constructed play. The way it layers both the tensions and the mergings between the past and present, the personal and the political, is so richly and carefully done, yet in such a way that you won't realize on a first watch/read. Although some of the particulars of the Soviet Union may feel alien, the fear, paranoia, and constant-tip-toeing around a government caught between lies and all-consuming control is far too familiar.

  • William Triplett: MEMOIRS OF A FORGOTTEN MAN

    Despite being steeped in Soviet-era realpolitik--with all its paranoia, suspicion, and fear--and even amid so many shrewd observations on the utilitarian uses/purposes of memory, this mesmerizing story at its heart pulses with the very human cost of history based not on truth but on the needs of who writes it. Or maybe more accurately: who rewrites it. A moving tale about the soul-crushing power of systemic lies, and what people do to survive that.

    Despite being steeped in Soviet-era realpolitik--with all its paranoia, suspicion, and fear--and even amid so many shrewd observations on the utilitarian uses/purposes of memory, this mesmerizing story at its heart pulses with the very human cost of history based not on truth but on the needs of who writes it. Or maybe more accurately: who rewrites it. A moving tale about the soul-crushing power of systemic lies, and what people do to survive that.

View all 14 recommendations

Character Information

Actor 1: Alexei/the Amazing Azarov
Actor 2: Kreplev/Vasily
Actor 3: Natalya/Madame Demidova
Actor 4: Peasant Woman/Miss Markayevna/Mother/Utkin.


The play works best with a cast of four actors, doubled as depicted here. Depending on the needs of the producing organization, however, a somewhat larger cast could be used and a different doubling scheme employed. For example, Vasily and Demidova could be cast separately, with the actress who plays Demidova doubling as Miss Markayevna and peasant woman and the actress who plays Mother doubling as Utkin. The character of Utkin also could be presented as female -- in which case, she would be referred to as 'Utkina' and references would be changed accordingly.
  • ALEXEI S.
    A man with an incredible memory.
    Character Age
    30s
    Character Gender Identity
    Male
  • VASILY
    Alexei's older brother.
    Character Age
    30s
    Character Gender Identity
    Male
  • SONIA MIKHAILOVNA (Mother)
    Mother to Alexei and Vasily
    Character Age
    60s
  • MADAME DEMIDOVA
    A displaced aristocrat, down on her luck.
    Character Age
    60s
    Character Gender Identity
    Female
  • AZAROV
    A carnival act.
    Character Age
    50s
    Character Gender Identity
    Male
  • MISS MARKAYEVNA
    Character Age
    50s
    Character Gender Identity
    Female
  • UTKIN
    Alexei's editor. May be played by the same actress who plays Mother and Teacher or the actor who plays Vasily. Adjust the references in the script accordingly.
    Character Age
    Undetermined
    Character Gender Identity
    Male or Female
  • PEASANT WOMAN
    A fan of Azarov's.
    Character Age
    Undetermined
    Character Gender Identity
    Female
  • KREPLEV
    A government investigator.
    Character Age
    Mid-50s
    Character Gender Identity
    Male
  • NATALYA BEREZINA
    A psychologist
    Character Age
    40s
    Character Gender Identity
    Female

Development History

  • Type Workshop, Organization HBMG Foundation , Year 2018
  • Type Reading, Organization New Jersey Rep, Year 2018
  • Type Reading, Organization Writers' Theatre of New Jersey, Year 2018
  • Type Reading, Organization Washington Stage Guild - Kennedy Center Page to Stage, Year 2017
  • Type Reading, Organization Reading Theatre Project, Year 2017

Production History

  • Type Professional, Organization Contemporary American Theatre Festival July 2018, Year 2018
  • Type Professional, Organization Shadowland Stages, June , Year 2019
  • Type Professional, Organization New Jersey Repertory Company, August, Year 2019
  • Type University, Organization Florida School of the Arts, Year 2021
  • Type Professional, Organization Washington Stage Guild, Year 2022
  • Type Professional, Organization Thalia's Umbrella, Seattle, Year 2024
  • Type Community Theater, Organization Limelight Theatre, Year 2024

Awards

  • Helen Hayes Recommended
    Helen Hayes Organization
    Selection
    2022
  • Rolling World Premiere
    National New Play Network
    Selection
    2018
  • HBMG Foundation Winter Playwrights Workshop
    HBMG Foundation
    Winner
    2018
  • Fellow
    Eugene O'Neill National Theatre Conference
    Semi-Finalist
    2016