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GOOD AT HEART: THE DRAMATIZATION OF THE DIARY OF ANNE FRANK AND ITS INFLUENCE ... PDF

139 Pages·2016·1.02 MB·English
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GOOD AT HEART: THE DRAMATIZATION OF THE DIARY OF ANNE FRANK AND ITS INFLUENCE ON AMERICAN CULTURAL PERCEPTIONS A thesis submitted to Kent State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts by Whitney Lewis Stalnaker May, 2016 © Copyright All rights reserved Except for previously published materials Thesis written by Whitney Lewis Stalnaker B.S., Glenville State College, 2011 M.A., Kent State University, 2016 Approved by Dr. Richard Steigmann-Gall , Advisor Dr. Kenneth Bindas , Chair, Department of History Dr. James Blank , Dean, College of Arts and Sciences TABLE OF CONTENTS TABLE OF CONTENTS ............................................................................................................... iii PREFACE ........................................................................................................................................v ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ............................................................................................................. ix INTRODUCTION ...........................................................................................................................1 Historiography ...............................................................................................................5 Methodology ..................................................................................................................9 Why This Play? ............................................................................................................12 CHAPTERS ONE MARKETING ANNE FRANK: THE CREATION OF AN AMERICANIZED ICON ............................................................................................14 Meyer Levin and the Rejected Script...........................................................................15 Creating Anne Frank ....................................................................................................16 Representation of Judaism ...........................................................................................20 Effects on the Supporting Characters ..........................................................................27 The Public Response ....................................................................................................35 TWO 1990S AMERICA: CHALLENGES TO ANNE FRANK’S IMAGE AND THE PUBLIC RESISTANCE ............................................................................42 Updating the Historiography........................................................................................43 The Holocaust in 1990s America .................................................................................48 Changes to the Script ...................................................................................................51 The Public Response ....................................................................................................67 iii THREE ANNE FRANK IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY: DEEPENING THE IDEOLOGICAL DIVIDE ...................................................................................82 The Struggle for Ownership.........................................................................................84 An Expanding Historiography .....................................................................................86 Reimagining Anne Frank .............................................................................................88 Case Studies .................................................................................................................92 The Public Response ....................................................................................................99 CONCLUSION ............................................................................................................................116 BIBLIOGRAPHY ........................................................................................................................121 iv PREFACE Like millions across the globe, my introduction to the Holocaust via The Diary of Anne Frank at the age of sixteen was a formative experience. However, unlike most readers, who closed the book with a sense of inspiration or spiritual triumph, my experience left me with a nagging sense of incompleteness. Certainly, Anne had documented her own thoughts and experiences thoroughly, and with impressive journalistic prowess, but what of the others in hiding with her? Though their presence is significant in Anne’s writing, I felt as though I was looking at them through an extremely blurry lens, as they were only mentioned in terms of their relationships with the diarist and not independently. It was the supporting characters who intrigued me the most, and I wanted – even needed – to know more about them. So, I embarked upon the exhaustive process of uncovering more, researching as thoroughly as an eleventh-grader possibly could, and the information I found was fascinating: Anne’s sister, Margot, had also kept a diary while they were in hiding, presumed to have been lost after their arrest. Friedrich “Fritz” Pfeffer, family friend and Anne’s roommate in hiding, had a son from a previous marriage who he had sent to safety in England when the Nazi threat consumed Germany. Auguste van Pels, the matriarch of the family who shared the hiding place with the Franks and Pfeffer, had secretly given a valuable antique ring to Miep Gies during their time in hiding as a token of gratitude for her help in their concealment. Anne’s mother, Edith, had come of age in 1920s Germany, where she dressed in flapper-style dresses and collected jazz records. The wealth of information overwhelmed me, yet in spite of these obviously intriguing v bits of information, it seemed that little attention was truly being paid to these individuals, outside of their interactions with Anne. No books exist, aside from a single biography of Otto Frank, dedicated to an empirical examination of these individuals’ lives. Their lives, experiences, and untimely ends – just as rich and complex as those of Anne herself – were essentially obscured. My frustration was only compounded when my local theatre company decided to produce The Diary of Anne Frank, the theatrical adaptation of Anne’s story, written by Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett and later adapted by Wendy Kesselman. Though a comparison of the original script and its updated adaptation quickly revealed that Kesselman’s script (the one that we chose to produce) was exponentially more faithful to the historical story than its predecessor, the depiction of the supporting characters in particular struck me. Aside from Anne, it was as though they had all been written as caricatures, the humanity that made their stories so poignant entirely erased from their onstage portrayals. Portraying Edith Frank, I was thrilled to discover the monologue in which she unburdens her fears to Miep Gies, yet found myself relegated to oversimplified reactions in many other scenes, usually chiding or fussing over Anne. The climactic scene in which Edith discovers that Hermann van Pels (or Herman van Daan, onstage) has been stealing bread from the dwindling food supply certainly allowed for some character development on my part, but I was shocked at the inaccurate and blatantly slanderous scene in which it occurred: at no point was it indicated that Hermann van Pels stole anything, let alone from his fellow hiders. I have since portrayed Edith three separate times, and the scene has proven an increasing point of contention for me the more that I have performed it. vi As I continued to discover the depths of the dichotomy between history and the stage, so did my castmates (likely assisted by the fact that I was none too quiet about it), and we took it upon ourselves to conduct the research necessary to better represent our characters. The results of our research took the form of many post-rehearsal discussions in which we vented our annoyance with the scant information available about our characters’ lives and attempted to “fill in the blanks” of their stories. Ultimately, these conversations left me with questions that would eventually become the basis of my thesis research. Namely, why was there such a dichotomy between the historical story and its interpretation on the stage? How is it that these people had become relegated to oversimplified caricatures of their already limited portrayals in Anne’s diary, especially when Otto Frank himself oversaw the first script’s creation? Why is it that, now over seventy years after Anne’s death, nobody has called for a dramatization that does justice to all of the people involved in her story? As it would turn out, the answers to these questions are neither direct nor easily explainable, but may only be understood through a thorough examination of the culture in which the play was written, as well as the demands of the public that has consumed it for so many decades. Through many hours of exhaustive research, fueled by countless cups of coffee, I set out to tackle the questions about the “supporting cast” of Anne’s diary that have plagued me for nearly a decade, but the story that emerged from my research transcended their onstage portrayal and soon became a complex narrative of American peculiarities, artistic interpretation, marketability, and cultural iconography. Though I remain frustrated at the inadequate attention these historical figures have received, I have now conquered my sizable confusion about how vii this particular theatrical script came to be and why it persists in a culture that seemingly should have addressed its disparity with the historical story by now. It is with this in mind that I present my thesis, the fruits of the labor that I undertook during my two years in the Kent State University History Department. The evolution of the dramatization and its American reception, which I will present in the coming pages, is not meant to put a period on the story, but is instead written in the hope that it will inspire an ellipsis. A conversation about how Anne Frank’s story has been presented to and synthesized by the public through its theatrical script is vital in assessing the responsibilities of artistic interpretations in disseminating historical stories, and, more importantly, in understanding how the historical story can become grossly altered and its players wholly marginalized if the interpretations fail to meet these responsibilities. It is my hope that this work, born of my years of frustration with how Anne’s story has been publically presented, will contribute to this extremely necessary conversation. viii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Researching a rather obscure branch of an otherwise well known topic is a sizable challenge, and one that I could not have possibly undertaken without the encouragement, assistance, and patience of many over the past two years. With this in mind, I would like to acknowledge the following individuals. To my advisor, Dr. Richard Steigmann-Gall, for the incredibly formative guidance and the many conversations over so many cups of coffee that I have lost count, in which he helped me to harness my inherent passion for the subject and create a work of which I am genuinely proud. To the members of my thesis committee, Dr. Shane Strate, Dr. Mary Ann Heiss, and Dr. Eric van Baars, for taking such active roles in this project and for their invaluable feedback during its creation. To the members of the Kent State University faculty, including Dr. Timothy Scarnecchia, Dr. Kenneth Bindas, and Professor Chaya Kessler for their unending support and input throughout this process. To the archival staff at the Wisconsin Center for Film and Theatre Research at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and specifically Assistant Director Mary K. Huelsbeck and Visual Materials Curator Andy Kraushaar, for tirelessly digitizing the endless folders of the Kermit Bloomgarden Collection so that I could conduct my research from many states away. ix To Kara Robinson of the Kent State University Library for the monumental assistance she provided in my search for the periodicals and archival collections integral to the success of this project. To my fellow Graduate Assistants in Bowman Hall 205 (and specifically Sarah Zabic, Alyssa Cady, Kayla Mason, and Christine Pienoski), for forming a community that has provided me with confidence, necessary distractions, emotional support, and a place to call home during my time at Kent State. When I look back on my time at Kent State University, it is the time spent in Bowman 205 that I will truly miss the most, and I cannot credit my colleagues enough for that fact. To my mother, Sherri Stalnaker, my grandmother, Audra Stalnaker, and the rest of my wonderful family for unequivocally believing that I would succeed in my pursuits, for serving as constant pillars of support, and for always giving me a home full of love and light to return to. To my castmates in Glenville State College Theatre, as well as our director Dennis Wemm, for all of the late night conversations after our rehearsals had concluded, which ultimately led me to pursue this topic. To Patrick Montgomery, Rose Johnson, and Justin Blankenship, for being there for absolutely everything – not only through the duration of this project, but for the many, many years we have known each other – and for all of the laughs, late nights, and road trips in which they became my second family. To Jamie Stanley, for far more than I can express in one paragraph, but mostly for looking on the bright side when I tried so hard to be pessimistic, for unfailingly knowing how to x

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The Diary of Anne Frank, the theatrical adaptation of Anne's story, written by . The answer lies within the play, the process by which the “good at . American culture, while managing to remain palatable to German .. thousands of reviews and hundreds of personal letters about Anne's book from.
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