Summer 1940. On a peaceful morning in her Washington D.C. living room, widow Fanny Farrelly anxiously awaits the return of her daughter and her German husband, fleeing Europe with their children.
As night falls, dark secrets emerge, and this American sanctuary becomes even more dangerous than what they left behind.
Known for her success on Broadway (The Little Foxes, The Children's Hour) Lillian Hellman was also a brilliant activist, ahead of her time. WATCH ON THE RHINE is her masterpiece political thriller, given a timely revival by director Ellen McDougall.
Cast includes Olivier Award winner Patricia Hodge and Caitlin FitzGerald (Succession, Inventing Anna) and John Light (The Son).
__Show warnings: please note this section contains spoilers__
The play contains references to concentration camps, shooting, bombing and refugees all in the context of WWII
There are also references to gambling, bribery and murder.
There are scenes of physical violence.
__Access performances__
CAPTIONED PERFORMANCE
Monday 23 January 7.30pm
AUDIO-DESCRIBED PERFORMANCE
Saturday 28 January 2.30pm, touch tour at 1pm
BSL PERFORMANCE
Saturday 21 January 2.30pm
The whimsical differences in lifestyle inexorably transmute into a sharp commentary and instigate a call to action for a nation that had not yet entered the conflict when the show premiered on Broadway in 1941. It's a bold, uncompromising move for Ellen McDougall to stage it in the face of the Ukrainian war and the perfect opportunity to prove why the Donmar didn't deserve the 100% cut to its Arts Council England funding.
If Hellman’s message about the foolishness of American isolationism – both politically and practically – feels perennially relevant, then there’s no denying ‘Watch on the Rhine’ was written for a specific time. It must have been incendiary in its day. It’s not now. But its shift from bourgeoise cosiness to shocking violence remains bravura stuff.
1941 | Broadway |
Broadway |
1980 | Broadway |
Broadway |
2022 | West End |
West End |
Videos