Incident at Vichy
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Arthur Miller
À propos de cette écoute
In Vichy, France, in 1942, nine men are detained under a shadowy pretext. As the tension builds, the men are questioned—are they the sort of people whom the new Nazi regime considers "inferior?"
Recorded before a live audience at the Skirball Cultural Center, Los Angeles in February 2002.
Directed by Richard Masur
Producing Director: Susan Albert Loewenberg
An L.A. Theatre Works full-cast performance featuring:
Ben Diskin as A Boy
Arye Gross as Bayard, An Electrician
Jamie Hanes as Rom/Police Captain
Andrew Hawkes as A Major
Gregory Itzin as Monceau, An Actor
Robert Lesser as Police Guard/Marchand, A Businessman/Ferrand, A Café Proprietor
Jon Matthews as Lebeau, A Painter
Lawrence Pressman as Von Berg, A Prince
Raphael Sbarge as Leduc, A Doctor
Armin Shimerman as First Detective/Professor Hoffman
Shahar Sorek as A Waiter/Second Detective
Recording, Editing and Mixing Engineer: David Kelly
Stage Manager and Live Sound Effects: Jode Ryskiewicz
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Avis de l'équipe
In this dark character study, the first sounds the listener hears are faint music, then sirens, then the echoing frightened voices of detainees in a damp Nazi holding cell in Paris, 1942. They're the voices of men in trouble who are wondering how they'll survive and who is to blame. The despairing tones of an electrician (Arye Gross), a painter (Jon Matthews), a doctor (Raphael Sbarge), and six others who are arguing about who deserves to be sent to a concentration camp aren't pretty to hear, but they're mesmerizing. L.A. Theatre Works perfectly captures the black-and-white Cold War ambiance of this 1964 one-act classic.