OOB's Criminals to Make Getaway Before Even Breaking and Entering | Playbill

Related Articles
News OOB's Criminals to Make Getaway Before Even Breaking and Entering A 60th Anniversary production of The Criminals, by Ferdinand Bruckner, has been postponed. The play was set to open in New York on Thursday, Nov. 29 at Performance Space 113, located at 113 Ludlow Street. Presented by Push Productions, the show was to run through Dec. 15.

A 60th Anniversary production of The Criminals, by Ferdinand Bruckner, has been postponed. The play was set to open in New York on Thursday, Nov. 29 at Performance Space 113, located at 113 Ludlow Street. Presented by Push Productions, the show was to run through Dec. 15.

Production spokesperson Cathy Popowytsch told Playbill On-Line (Nov. 28) the show's postponement came about owing to "legal trouble with the space" and that the company is "searching out new spaces" for after the new year. Reached Nov. 27, the reservation line for The Criminals said that the play is "postponed for the time being for the month of November and December... We will notify you shortly when the production is rescheduled."

Set in the late 1920's Germany, Bruckner's drama deals with the ways individual choices resulted in the violence and brutality that eventually became the Third Reich. The play is a criticism of a society whose intellectuals failed to put an end to the spread of international murder.

The Criminals, written in 1927, was the second entry in Bruckner's trilogy of plays concerning the youth of interwar Germany. The trilogy also included Pains of Youth (1926) and Race (1933). Bruckner's plays are referred to as "Zeitstucke" ("works on the time"), meaning that the plays deal with relevant social issues in theatrical terms. The plays were also part of a German art movement called "New Objectivity", which places an emphasis on psychological realism and social criticism from the perspective of the political left.

Bruckner emigrated to the United States in 1936 and worked as a writer, translator and teacher. Returning to Berlin in 1950, Bruckner translated the German premiere of Death of a Salesman. He served as a dramaturg at the Schiller Theatre until his death from emphysema in 1958. The German writer's most well-known plays are currently performed somewhat regularly in the major German repertory theatres. Scheduled to be featured in the ensemble cast of The Criminals were Hannah Alt, Laura Bucher, David Palmer Brown, Tom Escovar, Ledger Free, Lauren Gleason, Tilke Hill, Colin Hodges, Alan Jestice, Tonya Lester, Jason Moreland, Brian Normant, Suzan Perry, Frank Proudfoot, Laura Raynor, Brian Reilly, and Eric Walton. The production was to be directed by Michael Kimmel.

For information on The Criminals, call (212) 502-3590.

— By David Lefkowitz and
Chris Reichheld

 
RELATED:
Today’s Most Popular News:
 X

Blocking belongs
on the stage,
not on websites.

Our website is made possible by
displaying online advertisements to our visitors.

Please consider supporting us by
whitelisting playbill.com with your ad blocker.
Thank you!