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London West End Vaudeville Theatre Broken Glass

By Charlie Pagham


Phillip and Sylvia Gellburg are a Jewish married couple living in New York inside the last days of November 1938. Phillip works at a Wall Street bank, exactly where he works on foreclosing. Sylvia suddenly becomes partially paralysed from the waist down after reading about the events of Kristallnacht inside the newspaper.

Dr. Harry Hyman is contacted by Phillip to try and assist Sylvia recover. Dr. Hyman believes that Sylvia's paralysis is psychosomatic, and although he just isn't a psychiatrist, he begins to treat her based on his diagnosis. Throughout the play, Dr. Hyman learns a lot more about the issues that Sylvia is having in her personal life, particularly in her marriage.

Soon after an argument with his boss, Philip suffers a heart attack and is dying at his house. Phillip and Sylvia confront one another about their feelings. Before Phillip dies (though his death is by no means confirmed), his final words are "Sylvia, forgive me!". Upon his 'death', Sylvia is cured of her paralysis.

Broken Glass was initial staged, and received its globe premiere, at the Long Wharf Theatre in New Haven, Connecticut, just before transferring to the Booth Theatre from 24th April, 1994 to June 26th of the same year, totaling 73 performances. The original production was produced by Robert Whitehead, Roger L. Stevens, Lars Schmidt, Spring Sirkin, Terri Childs, and Timothy Childs; and directed by John Tillinger. It received its British premiere in the Royal National Theatre's Lyttelton Theatre on 4th August, 1994.

A revival of Broken Glass starring Anthony Sher was staged in the Tricycle Theatre in Kilburn, London in August to September 2011, ahead of transferring to the Vaudeville Theatre in the West Finish.

The original theatre on this site was developed by C J Phipps and opened on 16th April, 1870. The theatre was subsequently reconstructed, to designs once once again by C J Phipps, and reopened on 13th January, 1891. This theatre added the nonetheless existing four-storey high frontage in Portland stone. The theatre then closed on 7th November, 1925 when the interior was totally reconstructed to designs by Robert Atkins - the auditorium was changed from a horseshoe shape towards the present rectangle shape - reopening on 23rd February, 1926.




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