The Resistible Rise Of Arturo Ui
(Bertolt Brecht)
Brecht is not, in my opinion, a man of great subtlety. The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui does exactly what it says on the tin, chronicling the rise of a Chicago Mob Boss wanting to control the trade of cabbages in and out of the city. This loose cover for parodying the rise of Hitler and all his chums works well, giving the reader or audience some very palpable food for thought with their somewhat marginal entertainment. In the course of the play, obviously written to be staged by Brecht and in his style, we are introduced to each new atrocity and its consequences in a rather darkly unpleasant manner. Only the early part of his rise in Germany is covered, and by the final scene we are left with an ever more powerful fruit and veg magnate, now hatching plans to take over American grocery by force. This is not a play for the faint-hearted. It?s full of sly references (an not so sly ones) to the Hitler regime and unless you are familiar with his early activities (pre Poland and Concentration camps) much of the quality is lost. As a piece of brectian theatre it is one of his most seminal pieces. There is nothing quite so political in his repertoire, even if his other works make better pieces of theatre. One piece of advice: The text is not suitable for anything below degree level. And when there are other, better-researched and more popular works of Brecht out there (Mother Courage, The Caucasion Chalk Circle) this one need only be used as a comparison.
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