Tag Archives: Seth Rozin

‘The Mob’

The civic failure in Minneapolis, now called out, and justice, we hope, being restored by the power and persuasion and dignity of ‘the Mob’, has much occupied my thoughts.

Any reader in social studies early confronts ‘the Mob.’ Senior year in college — when I was already pretty well steeped in Bacon’s Rebellion, the Boston Massacre, Nat Turner’s Revolt, the ’45, the Whiskey Rebellion, the Paris Barricades, La Fronde, the Draft Riots, the Haymarket Riots, the Molly Malones, the Sepoys, the Navarodniks, the Ashram, Civil Rights, the Chicago Riots and the Newark Riots, and a hundred more — the Royal Shakespeare company gave a master class at Penn, focused on the “Friends, Romans, Countrymen” scene in Julius Caesar.

Brilliant actor Julian Glover stood in the center as Antony, and directed us students, as ‘the Mob’; sprinkled in among us, in their sweats and bare feet, were a dozen or so Titan actors of the RSC. They helped pull forth from each of us some inner-directed passion that turned into movement: ‘That makes me want to reach up and shake my fist.’ Or, ‘when I hear that, I want to grab my guts and groan and bend over, shaking.’ That sort of thing. And over the course of the rehearsal, in response to the rhythms of Shakespeare, amplified by Glover — there must have been eighty of us — our individual movements all added up to a collective trajectory; we all stopped being inner-directed at all, and had formed into a swirling, pacing, rippling flock of changeable passion, roiling around the stage and riding the roller-coaster of feelings that Antony evokes. There was no audience there to see it but I bet their blood would have run cold.

In that rehearsal, everything I had ever read about civil unrest, 1,001 individual clashes for social justice, across the cultures of 13 language groups, all suddenly clicked. The study of the Mob is the study of Homo sapiens in society.

At the end of their stay, our big old Victorian off-campus house at 4041 Walnut Street hosted a memorable “last night” party for them. I mention it only because my old housemate, Seth Rozin, the playwright and director, recently found in his basement the handwritten thank-you note that Mr. Glover sent us. Such simple, noble gestures are rare today, so I reproduce it here. You can tell he truly enjoyed himself.

The note is a treasure, but can you believe they didn’t put the RSC up at the Barclay?

The Philadelphia Sound

A SONG WITHOUT WORDS

Click, click, click………

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1TW_uOyl4FQbqq82M9BeZR9svGFh22KsF/view?usp=sharing

Philly Im Licht

Und zum Spazierengehn
genügt das Sonnenlicht.
Doch um die Stadt Philly zu sehn,
genügt die Sonne nicht.
Das ist kein lauschiges Plätzchen,
das ist ’ne ziemliche Stadt.
Damit man da alles gut sehen kann,
da braucht man schon einige Watt.
Na wat denn? Na wat denn?
Was ist das für’ne Stadt denn?
Komm, mach mal Licht,
damit man sehn kann, ob was da ist,
Komm, mach mal Licht,
und rede nun mal nicht.
Komm, mach mal Licht,
dann wollen wir doch auch mal sehen.
Ob das’ne Sache ist: Philly im Licht.

— paraphrase of Kurt Weill’s “Berlin Im Licht,” 1928

In the 18th century, thanks to religious tolerance, Philadelphia was a majority German-speaking city. (This prompted Franklin to propose, Puck-ishly, that the official language for the newly-independent United States ought to be German, rather than English.) Thus German customs (i.e., pretzels and beer) have always been welcome here. And beginning last year, Philadelphia adopted the German idea of the”Christmas Market,” and holds a European-style holiday festival in Centre Square. One of the highlights is an illumination of the west-side pavilion of City Hall. The View predicts this will become a beloved local institution — the 15-minute light-show (repeated on the half-hour through New Year’s Day) is nothing short of SPECTACULAR.

At night, locals make even the shuttered Italian Market romantic enough for a stroll.