DEBS: AN AMERICAN TRAGEDY follows Eugene V. Debs during a period of retreat and reckoning. Beginning in the fall of 1916, the play finds Debs defeated, electorally and physically, after losing his congressional race and enduring his third collapse. Determined to honor a promise to his wife Kate to withdraw from politics, he turns to writing and silence, watching as the nation hurtles toward war.
But in this...
DEBS: AN AMERICAN TRAGEDY follows Eugene V. Debs during a period of retreat and reckoning. Beginning in the fall of 1916, the play finds Debs defeated, electorally and physically, after losing his congressional race and enduring his third collapse. Determined to honor a promise to his wife Kate to withdraw from politics, he turns to writing and silence, watching as the nation hurtles toward war.
But in this pause, he encounters Mabel Dunlap Curry, a young and impassioned admirer whose presence stirs in him both inspiration and longing. Their emotionally intimate affair reignites the ideals Debs once championed, even as it strains his marriage and forces him to confront questions of loyalty.
As the United States enters World War I and enacts the Espionage Act, Debs becomes increasingly unable to remain silent. Arrests of fellow socialists, the suppression of dissent, and the drafting of his beloved nephew Oscar deepen the urgency of his conscience. Torn between private obligation and public duty, Debs must decide whether to keep his vow to Kate or to once more risk everything by speaking out.
The play culminates in his defiant 1918 speech in Canton, Ohio, an act of conscience that leads to his arrest and transforms him from a retired radical into a symbol of resistance and martyrdom for free speech.