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Theatre Calgary’s Play Guides and InterACTive Learning Program are made possible by the support of our sponsors: The Play Guide for Bad Jews was cre...
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Theatre Calgary’s Play Guides and InterACTive Learning Program are made possible by the support of our sponsors:

The Play Guide for Bad Jews was created by: Zachary Moull Artistic Associate Want to get in touch?  Send an email to [email protected]  Connect with us on our Facebook page  Tweet us @theatrecalgary #tcBadJews  Follow our Instagram @theatrecalgary

Bad Jews runs from March 15 to April 10, 2016 For tickets, visit theatrecalgary.com or call (403) 294-7447

Table of Contents THE BASICS The Company ....................................................................01 Who’s Who? ...................................................................... 02 Time and Place ................................................................. 02 The Story ..........................................................................02 EXPLORATIONS Joshua Harmon and Bad Jews ............................................ 03 Chai ................................................................................. 04 Sitting Shiva ...................................................................... 05 A Portrait of Jewish Americans ........................................... 06 Bad Jews Miscellany .......................................................... 07 CONVERSATIONS Conversation Starters ........................................................ 09 Post-Show Conversations.................................................... 09 What’s Your Family Story? ................................................. 09 Wresting with Faith: An Interview with Dr. Norm Schachar ....................... 10 Big Reads from Calgary Public Library ................................. 13 Calgary Jewish Community Centre ...................................... 14 Sources ............................................................................ 15

THE BASICS

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The Company Theatre Calgary presents

BAD JEWS By Joshua Harmon THE CAST Liam Haber Daphna Feygenbaum Jonah Haber Melody

Jeremy Ferdman Bobbi Goddard David Sklar Katharine Zaborsky

THE CREATIVE TEAM

Director Valerie Planche Set, Costume, & Lighting Design Cory Sincennes Production Dramaturg Zachary Moull Vocal Coach Jane MacFarlane Fight Director Karl H. Sine Stage Manager Assistant Stage Manager

Patti Neice Carissa Sams

THE BASICS

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Who’s Who? Daphna Feygenbaum: Liam and Jonah’s first cousin, a senior at Vassar. She’s passionate about her Jewish identity and plans to move to Israel after graduation to be with her boyfriend Gilad. Liam Haber: Daphna’s cousin: his mother is the sister of Daphna’s father. He’s a Ph.D. student at the University of Chicago, where he specializes in contemporary Japanese youth culture. Jonah Haber: Liam’s younger brother, a sophomore at UVM. Melody: Liam’s girlfriend, works for a Chicago non-profit.

Time and Place Bad Jews takes place in a studio apartment in the Upper West Side of Manhattan. It is the present day, in March, late at night after the funeral of the three cousins’ beloved grandfather.

The Story On the night after their grandfather’s funeral, three young Jewish cousins are forced to bunk together in a cramped apartment. Daphna and Jonah have been home from college since “Poppy” Feygenbaum died two days ago, helping their parents prepare for the funeral and the shiva. Liam, the eldest, missed the funeral after losing his cell phone on a snowboarding trip. He arrives late at night with his non-Jewish girlfriend Melody. Tempers flare when Liam and Daphna square off over the inheritance of a precious family heirloom: a necklace that belonged to their grandfather. The result is a ferocious and articulate brawl over religious tradition and cultural legacy.

EXPLORATIONS

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Joshua Harmon and Bad Jews Playwright Joshua Harmon’s first inspiration for Bad Jews came at a Yom Hashoah (Holocaust Memorial Day) service during his second year

of

interview

university. with

In

an

Roundabout

Theatre for the play’s opening in 2012, Harmon recalls what he felt was a “depressingly unmoving” ceremony

in

which

the

grandchildren of survivors told their ancestors’ stories, instead of the survivors themselves. The third-person perspective of the recollections left him cold. “It

Joshua Harmon

was strange and sterile and laden with clichés but lacking in genuine feeling,” he says, “and it scared me.” That got him thinking about his own relationship to Judaism, and how his generation will approach its cultural legacy and tell the Jewish story. The eye-catching title Bad Jews was Harmon’s next spark. It’s somewhat provocative given the long history of antisemitism – his own grandmother asked why he couldn’t call the play Good Jews instead. But as Harmon told the Jewish Daily Forward, “It’s an expression I have definitely heard people my age use very freely.”In that context, it’s a self-deprecatory joke about one’s own level of observance. Beyond that, the title points out the play’s questions about cultural inheritance and the moral high ground. What does it mean to be a “bad Jew” or a “good Jew” in today’s world? And who gets to decide? After having the original idea, Harmon let the project sit in his notebook for several years, unsure of how to approach such a challenging piece while still

EXPLORATIONS

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a student. When he returned to it in his late twenties and finally finished a first draft, the script got immediate attention and landed him his first-ever major production. That off-Broadway staging at Roundabout Theatre thrilled New York audiences and was remounted the following year. Since then, Bad Jews has become one of the most popular plays across North America. “I firmly believe that by being incredibly specific,” Harmon says, “you can tap into something universal.” The play’s title aside, Harmon resists the urge to pass judgment on his characters. He has said that he sees parts of himself in each of them and has, after all, placed them in a difficult emotional setting. “Their anger doesn’t come from a place of anger,” he told an interviewer. “It comes from a place of love, and disappointment, and frustration at how to carry on their grandfather’s legacy.”

Chai In Bad Jews, three cousins fight over a pendant with the Hebrew word chai that belonged to their beloved grandfather. A Holocaust survivor, he kept the pendant safe in the Nazi concentration camps by holding it under his tongue. It’s a viscerally meaningful family heirloom – and only one cousin can have it at the end of the night. The word chai means “living” or “life.” It’s related to the traditional Jewish toast l’chayim, “to life,” and is pronounced with a raspy ‘h’ sound. Since the word’s two letters (chet and yud) add up to 18 in Jewish numerology, Jews often give monetary gifts in multiples of 18 to wish the recipient the blessing of long life. Similarly, some Jewish people wear chai necklaces for good fortune – and as a cultural symbol connecting the wearer to the living Jewish tradition.

EXPLORATIONS

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Sitting Shiva Jewish funerals take place as soon as possible out of respect for the deceased, and almost always within three days. It is an important mitzvah (commandment or good deed) to accompany a loved one to their final resting place and assure their proper burial, and attendees at a funeral traditionally add a shovelful of earth to the grave as a final kindness. The parents, children, siblings, and spouse of the deceased are designated as avelim, the official mourners, and it is a mitzvah to comfort them in their time of grief. Shiva (literally “seven”) is the customary mourning period that begins on the day of the funeral. The mourners gather at the home of the deceased or a close relation to “sit shiva” for seven days. In Bad Jews, the family is sitting shiva for “Poppy” Feygenbaum at the apartment of Liam and Jonah’s parents, just down the hall from the studio apartment where the play takes place. Traditionally, mourners do not leave the shiva house (except to attend synagogue on Shabbat). They sit on low stools or benches, symbolizing their grief, and cover all mirrors, since personal appearance is not important at such a time. Friends and family members visit each day to bring food and take care of the mourners, who have no social obligation to play the host or even take part in conversation. Visitors may also join the daily service that includes the recitation of the Mourner’s Kaddish, a prayer that makes no mention of death and expresses hope for the future. Taken as a whole, the ritual focuses on family togetherness at a difficult time. It creates a space for grief, while also gently urging mourners back towards the world of the living through the presence of their loved ones and the support of their community.

EXPLORATIONS

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A Portrait of Jewish Americans In 2013, the Pew Research Center conducted a major survey of Jewish people in the United States, called “A Portrait of Jewish Americans.” The study found that “American Jews overwhelmingly say they are proud to be Jewish and have a strong sense of belonging to the Jewish people,” but the nature of Jewish identity in today’s world is changing. You can explore the full results online here, but these are some finding that are particularly relevant to Bad Jews: 

Jewish identity isn’t simply a matter of religion. A majority of Jewish Americans said that being Jewish is mainly related to culture or ancestry. There is a strong secular tradition, and more than two-thirds agreed that a person could be Jewish without believing in God.



Holocaust remembrance is a major part of Jewish identity for many Jewish Americans. The survey asked whether certain activities or attributes are an essential part of what it means to be Jewish. Remembering the Holocaust topped the list, and many also said that leading an ethical and moral life or working for justice and equality were essential to their Jewish identities. Eating Jewish foods, observing Jewish law, or being part of a Jewish community rated much lower – below traits such as intellectual curiosity or a good sense of humour.



The rate of intermarriage (Jews married to non-Jews) has increased dramatically with each recent generation. It rose from 17% of those married before 1970, to 35% of those married in the 1970s, to 58% of those married since 2000. The study also found that children of intermarriages are less likely to be raised as Jewish than those with two Jewish parents, and are themselves more likely to intermarry.

“Am I a Jew? Yes, I’m Jewish, but I really have no religion. I’m Jewish in that it oozes out of my pores uncontrollably.” –Sarah Silverman

EXPLORATIONS

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Bad Jews Miscellany Here are some topics that come up over the course of Bad Jews:

Tattoos in Judaism Leviticus 19:28 forbids permanent body markings such as tattoos: You shall not make cuts in your flesh for a person who died. You shall not etch a tattoo on yourselves. Some commentators highlight the Jewish belief that humans were made in the divine image, so the body should be treated with

respect

and

dignity.

Others say the rule helped differentiate

ancient

Israelite

worship from the practices of other tribes. But religious law aside, a strong cultural taboo developed out of the Holocaust, when

many

Jews

in

Nazi

concentration camps had their identification numbers forcibly tattooed on their arms. Auschwitz survivor Sam Rosenszweig displays his identification tattoo (Rudy Purificato, U.S. Air Force)

Hebrew Names Many North American Jews have a ceremonial Hebrew name, as well as a legal English name. Daphna, whose English name is Diana, has made the bold and uncommon decision to use her Hebrew name in everyday life, perhaps in anticipation of her plan to move to Israel (make aliyah). Liam, in contrast, likes to keep his Hebrew name a secret.

EXPLORATIONS

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Passover Passover or Pesach is the Jewish holiday that commemorates the Israelites’ liberation from slavery in Egypt. The main celebration is the seder, a ritual meal that usually takes place in the home, during which the participants tell the story of the exodus. For the duration of the holiday, observant Jews do not eat leavened bread or other products made with wheat, barley, spelt, rye, or oats; only an unleavened bread called

Matzah

matzah, made solely from flour and water, is permissible. This is to remember that when the Israelites fled Egypt, they were in such haste that their dough did not have time to rise.

Shofar The shofar is a ceremonial musical instrument made from a ram’s horn. It is played in synagogue on Rosh Hashanah (the Jewish New Year) and Yom Kippur (the Day of Atonement).

Hora The hora is a group dance that is

Blowing the shofar on Rosh Hashanah (Flickr user slgckgc)

common at Jewish celebrations such as weddings and bar or bat mitzvahs. Everyone joins hands or locks arms in a circle and steps in time, revolving around the room, while often the newlywed couple or other celebrants are lifted up on chairs in the centre. The hora has its roots in Romanian folk dance; it became popular in Israel in the mid 20th century and spread to Jewish festivities worldwide from there.

CONVERSATIONS

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Conversation Starters 

What do you think should happen to Poppy’s chai?



Who do you feel more sympathetic towards, Daphna or Liam?



Why do you think the playwright made the decision to keep the family’s older generation off of the stage?



Life-cycle events such as weddings and funerals can bring out deep emotions and hidden conflicts in families. Do you see any of your own such experiences reflected in the play?



What’s your most precious memory of a grandparent?



How important is cultural or religious heritage to your own identity?



Do you think the ending of the play is hopeful or pessimistic?

Post-Show Conversations Have questions? Thoughts? A perspective to share? We invite you to join us in conversation after each performance of Bad Jews to discuss the play with members of our artistic staff and artists from the production. These talks will take place in the main lobby immediately after the show.

What’s Your Family Story? Bad Jews is a play about passing on family legacies and traditions. What’s one story that you would want to share with your grandchildren? It might be about a family member, a journey, an event, an important object... In the main lobby before each performance, visit the writing tables and tell us your story on a piece of stationery. After the show, check back to collect one to take home! Have you already been to the show? You can also email your story to us at [email protected] or post it to Facebook or Twitter, #tcBadJews.

CONVERSATIONS

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Wrestling with Faith An Interview with Dr. Norm Schachar Dr. Norm Schachar is Emeritus Professor of Surgery at the University of Calgary, a founding member of Temple B’nai Tikvah (Calgary’s Reform Jewish synagogue), and a board member of Theatre Calgary. We asked him about the personal resonances of the play Bad Jews. When did you first encounter Bad Jews? Dennis Garnhum emailed me and asked me to read the play to get my opinion on putting it on at Theatre Calgary. My mother had been diagnosed with a terminal illness, and I was just heading out the door

Dr. Norm Schachar

to go be with her in Toronto alongside my brother and my sister. It was poignant to first hear about the play in that context. The themes felt current in my own family dynamic. I was with my family for six weeks, including my mother’s shiva. What resonated most for you? For me, there was the overriding theme of Jewish guilt. Guilt is used as a motivator and a guide for expectations. It’s something that’s visited by one generation upon the next: “Look what I went through, I want you to have better...” The Hebrew expression l’dor vador, from one generation to the next, appears all over the place in the Bible and in prayers. But in this play, there’s a generation missing. The parents don’t show up. The playwright makes the grandchildren decide for themselves, with their own resources and with all the pressures of modern life, and it’s an explosive dynamic.

CONVERSATIONS

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Of course this play focuses on the microcosm of a Jewish family, but I think you can laugh at it and cry with it whatever your culture. Would you tell me about your own journey with Judaism? I was born in 1945. When I was growing up, Jews weren’t allowed to join the golf club. There was still a quota on Jews being admitted to medical school and the university, even in Toronto, which is one of the most Jewish cities in North America. My uncle who was born right after the First World War, he got into medical school but he couldn’t get into a surgery residency, because Jews weren’t allowed in surgery. A generation later I got into surgery – I even got into orthopedics, which was sort of the last bastion of the antisemitic people. My parents were liberal and very proactive about integration, but they were also fairly observant. We mostly kept kosher, I had a bar mitzvah. And when I wanted to intermarry, that was a big deal. Basically I came to Calgary in the first place because I was running from home. My parents were so upset that if I married the love of my life, my non-Jewish girlfriend, I would be setting the trend. It would be my fault if my brother and sister didn’t marry in the faith. So instead of waiting for them to say that they were going to sit shiva for me, I just left and came to Calgary. I like to say that I came to Calgary as an adventure and stayed because I loved it, but it was also because I knew that if I went back, that part of my life would be complicated. So I live in Calgary because I’m Jewish, in a certain sense. I let everyone know I’m Jewish, since I feel that I’m a respected person and I want to be a good example. But of course, the title of this play is a bit scary for Jews. Jews like to fly below the radar a bit. We don’t want to be known as “bad” anything. The playwright’s grandmother asked him, “couldn’t you change the title to Good Jews?” The question the playwright’s raising is, what is a bad Jew? And then, what is a good Jew? Even Jews can’t agree. If a bad Jew eats bacon, then I’m a bad Jew. But if a good Jew teaches the precepts of Judaism, and tries

CONVERSATIONS

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to stick to the ten commandments, and helps build a temple... then I think I’m a good Jew. Is it hopeful or discouraging to see younger generations still wrestling with some of the same questions that you did? I’m struck by the word “wrestling” in your question. In the Bible, Jacob wrestles with an angel and his name is changed to Israel, which means “he who wrestles with God.” And the Jewish people are wrestling with God still. The idea of struggling with our faith is an ongoing theme. I helped to start the Reform congregation in Calgary – part of my own wrestling match. We started with nine families, and now we have 350 families. But the Jewish faith is still struggling. It would be a lot bigger if we didn’t have that six million person hole in the middle of it. Our kids will have struggles, and they won’t be little struggles. But I would say it’s a worthwhile struggle. The title Bad Jews gets attention and opens a difficult conversation, and then we have to participate in the conversation. It’s like what Tevye says in Fiddler on the Roof: “God, I know we’re the chosen people, but once in a while, can’t you choose someone else?” But guess what, this playwright has chosen us. He wants us to talk about these things. And we all need to talk about questions of faith and culture and identity, because they’re not going away. If we have to start off by talking about bad Jews, that’s okay, because Jews are resilient. God put Jews on Earth to wrestle with these questions, and I think these are very fruitful conversations to have. Of course, the rabbinic tradition in Judaism is one of scholarship and debate. If I wasn’t a surgeon, I would have been a stand-up comic rabbi. As for me, my mother was proud of me and my family, even though I married out of the faith. At family gatherings where people talk about intermarriage, I can say my wife became a leader in the Jewish community, we have three daughters with university degrees, got two doctors and a lawyer… Not bad. Not bad for a bad Jew.

CONVERSATIONS

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Big Reads from Calgary Public Library By Rosemary Griebel

Barney’s Version, by Mordecai Richler Novel, 1997. Wherever Barney Panofsky ventures, craziness happens in this portrayal of a thrice-married, cigar-smoking, whisky-drinking possible murderer about to publish his highly questionable memoir. A long, colourful rant against the world. Winner of the Giller, Commonwealth Writers, and Stephen Leacock prizes.

Between Gods, by Alison Pick Memoir, 2014. From one of Canada’s most talented young writers, an unflinching and moving memoir of the author’s journey to uncover her Jewish heritage, while struggling with crippling depression. An unusual story, told with heartbreaking insight regarding what we carry with us and what we leave behind.

When We Were Bad, by Charlotte Mendelson Novel, 2007. “The Rubin family, everybody agrees, seems doomed to happiness.” With this opening, we feel certain Fate is going to have other ideas. In fact, the powerful, envied family, headed by Rabbi Claudia, seems so smug that we rather want them to suffer. In reality, their happiness is largely a façade, and each member of the household is bent on his or her personal kind of self-sabotage. A witty, poignant portrayal of a family in crisis. Click on the book covers to check availability at Calgary Public Library!

CONVERSATIONS

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This Is Where I Leave You, by Jonathan Tropper Novel, 2009. Simultaneously mourning the death of his father and the demise of his marriage, Judd joins the rest of the Foxmans as they reluctantly submit to their patriarch’s dying request: to spend the seven days after the funeral together. A funny, emotionally raw novel about love, marriage, divorce, family, and the ties that bind – whether we like it or not. It was made into a film in 2014, starring Jane Fonda, Tina Fey, and Jason Bateman.

Born to Kvetch: Yiddish Language and Culture in All Its Moods, by Michael Wex Non-fiction, 2005. This informative and amusing tour through the Yiddish language and the fine art of complaint is not for klutzes or nudniks. As illustrated in Wex’s book, Yiddish is fundamentally a language of exile shaped by centuries of displacement and oppression, and it has developed scores of words and idioms that permeate English as well.

Calgary Jewish Community Centre We asked Shula Banchik, Cultural Arts Manager at the Calgary Jewish Community Centre, to read Bad Jews and tell us what she thought. Here’s what she said: Can’t wait to see the performance! When it's all about preserving chai (life), everybody gives all they have. A passionate, explosive, and hilarious piece of dark comedy, with thought-provoking dialogue that took me on an identity journey. The Calgary Jewish Community Centre offers social, educational, recreational, and cultural programming and is open to everyone. To learn more, visit their website at www.calgaryjcc.com.

CONVERSATIONS

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Sources Black, Joe. “What to Expect at a Jewish Funeral.” www.reformjudaism.org/what-expect-jewish-funeral Diamant, Anita. Saying Kaddish: How to Comfort the Dying, Bury the Dead, and Mourn as a Jew. New York: Schocken, 1988. Karesh, Sara E., and Mitchell M. Hurvitz, eds. Encyclopedia of Judaism. New York: Facts on File, 2006. Pandolfi, Elizabeth. “There Are No Bad Jews in Bad Jews – Just Passionate Ones.” Charleston City Paper, July 15, 2015. Philologos. “Exploring ‘Chai’ Culture.” Forward, Nov 11, 2012. “A Portrait of Jewish Americans.” Pew Research Center. 2013. www.pewforum.org/2013/10/01/jewish-american-beliefs-attitudesculture-survey/ Schleier, Curt. “Chief of the Bad Jews.” Forward, Oct 1, 2013. Schwartz, Yardena. “Tattoos Reign in Israel – Jewish Law or No.” Forward, Feb 19, 2014. Sernowitz, Gary. “I Do Not Want to Dance the Hora.” Slate, June 29, 2012. www.slate.com/articles/double_x/doublex/2012/06/hora_and_my_jewish _wedding_forget_tradition_i_will_not_dance_.html Sod, Ted. “Interview with Playwright Joshua Harmon.” In Roundabout Theatre Upstage Guide for Bad Jews, 2013. Syme, Daniel B. “Sitting Shiva.” www.reformjudaism.org/sitting-shiva “Tattoos and Numbers.” United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/article.php?ModuleId=10007056 Torgovnick, Kate. “For Some Jews, It Only Sounds Like ‘Taboo.’” New York Times, July 17, 2008. Uhry, Alfred. “The Mentor and the Mensch.” American Theatre, April 2014.

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