Mein Kampf

Adolf Hitler's notorious manifesto seems like unusual fodder for comedy, but the play has been a success since its first staging in 1987.
Nick Spunde
Published on July 07, 2014
Updated on December 08, 2014

Overview

So there's a play called Mein Kampf. A comedy, in fact. Undoubtedly someone’s outraged already, just reading that.

Adolf Hitler's notorious manifesto certainly seems like unusual fodder for comedy, but the play has been a perennial success since its first staging in Vienna in 1987. Written by Hungarian-born Jewish playwright George Tabori, who was himself an exile from the Third Reich, it casts the young Hitler in a farcical role as a penniless and pitiful wannabe artist. While staying in a seedy hostel, young Hitler strikes up a friendship with an old Jewish man, who becomes his inspiration for everything from the title of his book to his style of moustache.

Both a fast-moving lampoon and an exploration of the origins of evil, Mein Kampf promises to be outrageous in every sense of the word. After a hit season in 2013, this production returns for an encore season in July 2014. 

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