Brown, Never Black: Othello on the Nazi Stage

Authors

  • Alessandra Bassey King’s College London

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18778/2083-8530.22.04

Keywords:

Othello, Nazi Germany, Nazi Shakespeare, Blackface, Race, Representation, Shakespeare Production, Global Shakespeare, German Shakespeare, Theatre History

Abstract

This paper examines the ways in which Othello was represented on the Nazi stage. Included in the theatre analyses are Othello productions in Frankfurt in 1935, in Berlin in 1939 and 1944, and in pre-occupation Vienna in 1935. New archival material has been sourced from archives in the aforementioned locations, in order to give detailed insights into the representation of Othello on stage, with a special focus on the makeup that was used on the actors who were playing the titular role. The aim of these analyses is not only to establish what Othello looked like on the Nazi and pre-Nazi stage, but also to examine the Nazis’ relationship with Shakespeare’s Othello within the wider context of their relationship with the Black people who lived in Nazi Germany at the time. In addition, the following pages offer insights into pre-Nazi, Weimar productions of Othello in order to create a more complex and comparative understanding of Nazi Othello productions and the wider theatrical context within which they were produced. In the end, we find out, based on existing evidence, why Othello was brown, and never Black.

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Author Biography

Alessandra Bassey, King’s College London

Alessandra Bassey is a researcher whose interests sit at the intersection of Shakespeare, Race and African Studies. She has a PhD from King’s College London, which focuses on the representation of Shakespeare’s characters on the Nazi stage, with a special focus on racialised ‘Others’ such as Othello and Shylock. She has presented her work in multiple conferences world-wide, and has been published in journals like European Judaism and Modern Language Review, with another article forthcoming in Theatres of War: A Contemporary Perspective, published by Methuen Drama / Bloomsbury. She is the co-founder and co-editor of the literary platform and non-profit organisation Literandra, which promotes literary traditions and other art forms that emanate from the African continent and its diaspora. She is particularly passionate about African Literature(s) and its inclusion in university curricula.

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Published

2020-12-30

How to Cite

Bassey, A. (2020). Brown, Never Black: Othello on the Nazi Stage. Multicultural Shakespeare: Translation, Appropriation and Performance, 22(37), 51–65. https://doi.org/10.18778/2083-8530.22.04