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Dave Davies

πŸ‘€ Speaker
5943 total appearances
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Appearances Over Time

Podcast Appearances

Fresh Air
John Lithgow

Lithgow has also written several children's books, a memoir titled Drama, an Actor's Education, and the Dumpty Trilogy, three books of satirical poems inspired by the current occupant of the White House.

Fresh Air
John Lithgow

Lithgow's current play, Giant, is set in 1983, when Roald Dahl ignited a controversy by writing an article with views that were widely seen as anti-Semitic.

Fresh Air
John Lithgow

In the play, Dahl and his fiancΓ©e are at home in discussion with a British and an American representative of Dahl's publishers, who want him to say something to soften his message and diffuse the controversy.

Fresh Air
John Lithgow

It soon emerges that the American rep is a practicing Jewish woman, and Dahl isn't backing down.

Fresh Air
John Lithgow

The play was first performed in London, with Lithgow starring as Roald Dahl.

Fresh Air
John Lithgow

He and the play won Lawrence Olivier Awards, the British equivalent of the Tony.

Fresh Air
John Lithgow

John Lithgow, welcome to Fresh Air.

Fresh Air
John Lithgow

You're playing Dahl who is kind of – it's oversimplistic to call him a villain here.

Fresh Air
John Lithgow

But he's a very problematic character.

Fresh Air
John Lithgow

Did you feel empathy for him and how did you connect with him?

Fresh Air
John Lithgow

Why don't you just tell us a bit about the action in this play?

Fresh Air
John Lithgow

It's you as Roald Dahl and your fiancΓ© and two representatives from your publishers.

Fresh Air
John Lithgow

Give us a sense of what the issue is and what happens.

Fresh Air
John Lithgow

There's a distinction to be made between criticizing the policies of the Israeli government and condemning Jewish people as a whole.

Fresh Air
John Lithgow

But the lines can get fuzzy and assumptions can be made that anti-Semitism is at the heart of anybody criticizing Israel.

Fresh Air
John Lithgow

And I think part of the brilliance of this play is that in the first act, when we don't learn Dahl's exact words from the article he wrote or other comments that would be made public later, we're kind of invited to explore our own feelings about this and think,

Fresh Air
John Lithgow

Maybe Roald Dahl is just making a point about the conduct of war and not about the Jewish people.

Fresh Air
John Lithgow

Right.

Fresh Air
John Lithgow

And the debate gets increasingly personal.

Fresh Air
John Lithgow

And in the end, Dahl says some things which – I mean I was at one performance and there was one comment.