'Year One of the Empire' Premieres Feb.29
By: BWW News Desk Jan. 29, 2008
Metropolitan Playhouse will present the long-awaited New York Premiere of Year One of the Empire by award-winning theater critic Elinor Fuchs and historian Joyce Antler. Directed by Alex Roe, performances begin February 29 at The Metropolitan Playhouse.
Year One of the Empire presents in bracing, yet often hilarious detail the exact moment when America became an imperial power -- the little known Philippine-American War at the turn of the last century. Its rich brew of U.S. belligerence, election politics, and public outrage offers shocking parallels to American wars in Vietnam (which inspired the play) and Iraq (which made the play "contemporary" again )."Few Americans know that, on the heels of the Spanish-American war (waged to free Cuba from Spain), the U.S. occupied Spain's most important Pacific colonial trophy, the Philippine Islands, and became embroiled in a prolonged, bloody insurrection. Straight from the historical record, the play shows avowed imperialists like Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, the fast-rising Theodore Roosevelt, and President William McKinley, maneuvering the US into empire and stumbling into war. The Army assured the public it would end Filipino resistance in a month, but it took more than three years. The US committed 125,000 American troops, suffered 4,000 combat deaths, and finally resorted to extreme methods, including the widespread use of water torture, or "waterboarding" as it is called today. As young women with their present distinguished careers still years ahead of them, Fuchs and Antler met by chance in a beauty parlor and decided to collaborate on what became Year One of the Empire as a response to the war in Vietnam. First published by Houghton Mifflin in 1973, it won the Los Angeles Drama-Logue playwriting award in 1980 after its production at the Odyssey Theatre. The published text has since been studied at numerous universities,"states a press release.
Videos