Now Playing: Nights of Wrath
Directed by Rafael De Mussa
With Alicia Adema, Gary Carlson, Rafael De Mussa, James Craft, Ed Suarez, John Gilligan, Ruth Kavanagh, Cain Perry
Sets by Scott Aronow, Costumes by Ramona Ponce, Sound by Kristin Smith, and Lights by Steve O'Shea
Nazi-controlled Chartres...April, 1944. A resistance fighter who has blown up a train is killed by the Gestapo, and the friend who betrayed him to collaborators is executed by other resistance members. Nights of Wrath travels back in time to unravel the secret of the betrayal as it takes a searing look at anti-Nazi terrorism and pro-status-quo collaboration.
Armand Salacrou (1899-1989) wrote Nights of Wrath in 1946, one year after the end of the Second World War. The play explores the heroism of France's 'secret army', which Salacrou had witnessed first-hand as one of the members of the intellectual resistance alongside Jean-Paul Sartre and others but, much more unusually, Nights of Wrath also examines the ease with which many outwardly respectable French slipped into passive or active collaboration without ever particularly meaning to.
However, the most striking feature of the play for modern audiences is that it isn't just about the 1940s. Its exploration of the motives for going to war, the moral paradoxes of terrorism, the impossibility of neutrality, and the problems of an ethical politics in a faithless age are all highly relevant today, as this new translation emphasises by adopting a 21st-century idiom for a play written more than half a century ago.
Reviews of Nights of Wrath
"The French playwright Armand Salacrou (1899-1989), though hardly known here in his own time, seems to be enjoying a sort of clandestine renaissance; this is the second of his plays to be seen Off-Off Broadway in two years. Clandestineness is appropriate to this 1946 play, his best-known work in France, getting its first English-language staging since 1947: It deals with the anti-Nazi resistance, in which Salacrou himself was a participant."
- Voice Choices, The Village Voice
"The scene is Nazi-controlled Chartes, April 1944. A resistance fighter who has blown up a train is killed by the Gestapo, and the friend who betrayed him to a collaborator is executed by other resistance members. Nights of Wrath travels back in time to unravel the secret of the betrayal as it takes a searing look at the ethics of anti-Nazi terrorism and pro-status-quo collaboration."
- TheatreSource
