AccessMyLibrary provides FREE access to over 30 million articles from top publications available through your library.

Stop-Rocks; In his taut new drama, the prolific playwright returns to his native land of Czechoslovakia to explore the uneasy relationship among dissidence, consciousness and creativity.

Newsweek International

| July 24, 2006 | COPYRIGHT 2006 Newsweek, Inc. All rights reserved. Any reuse, distribution or alteration without express written permission of Newsweek is prohibited. For permission: www.newsweek.com. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

Byline: Tara Pepper

When the long-haired, politically apathetic Czech rock group the Plastic People of the Universe were arrested in 1977 by the country's hard-line communist government, Vaclav Havel, then a dissident playwright, worried he would be unable to muster much support for the group among the underground intelligentsia. "He thought it would be easier if the band were also philosophers and intellectuals," says Tom Stoppard, whose new play "Rock'N'Roll," which opens in London's West End this week, was inspired by the incident.

Over the years, the prolific and political playwright has regularly dipped into the dissident articles penned by Havel, now a close friend. From them he discovered that Havel's fears for the band were unfounded. In fact, the arrest of these gangly youths triggered the drafting of Charter 77, the manifesto criticizing Czechoslovakia's hard-line leaders, whose signatories guided the country's first post-communist government. Discovering this link was "a watershed," says Stoppard, who was born in Czechoslovakia. "These highbrow friends with their clever books understood instantly that this time it was serious. The people on trial were not dissidents. They just wanted to play rock and roll." And this paradox--that musicians who cared nothing for politics could be perceived as the greatest threat to the establishment--forms the vibrant core of his rich new work.

Stoppard's play, only the second he has written about his native country, was also fired by a personal quest. For some time, he says, he had thought of writing a "fake autobiography," set in a parallel world he returns to after World War II instead of settling in England, where he landed as an 8-year-old in 1946. Back then, his mother was determined to forget the past, concerned that Stoppard and his older brother would be hampered by their foreignness. It was only after her death in 1996 that Stoppard, then 59, began exploring his roots. "I've always been curious about how I would have reacted had I been living [in Czechoslovakia] during those years," he says. "I have no idea whether I would have stuck my head above the parapet or not."

His fictional alter ego in "Rock'N'Roll," Jan, played by a captivating Rufus Sewell, has no such qualms. A callow Czech Ph.D. candidate at Cambridge, Jan abandons his studies and heads for Prague in 1968 to support the liberal reforms of communist leader Alexander Dubcek, even as the worried Soviets are amassing tanks on the border. Jan remains cheerfully oblivious to the increasing repression, as reformers all around him are purged and imprisoned. He refuses to sign the petitions of his dissident friend Ferdinand. "I came back to save rock'n'roll," says Jan, a diehard fan of the Plastic People of the Universe. "And my mother," he adds after a moment.

What begins as a meditation on dissidence turns into a thoughtful and witty exploration of the nature of consciousness. Jan leaves ...

Related articles from newspapers, magazines, journals, and more
Can't Stoppard the music.(Rock 'n' Roll)(Theater review)
Magazine article from: Variety Rooney, David November 12, 2007 700+ words
...dissident at the heart of Tom Stoppard's new play, says, "There...parents fled the Nazis in 1938, Stoppard now imagines how his return...notably Czech band the Plastic People of the Universe, whose underground...by life's ironies. Among Stoppard's sweeter romantic indulgences...
The revolution will be amplified: Tom Stoppard's 'Rock 'n'...
Magazine article from: Commonweal Wren, Celia December 21, 2007 700+ words
It's odd to imagine Tom Stoppard as a fan of classic rock...November issue of Vanity Fair, Stoppard confessed that he wrote Arcadia...that characterizes much of Stoppard's work. Even the brainy...1976 arrest of a band, the Plastic People of the Universe, catalyzes...
Stoppard offers crash course in Czech history.(Rock 'N' Roll)(Theater review)
Magazine article from: Variety Benedict, David June 19, 2006 700+ words
...a play in two acts by Tom Stoppard. Directed by Trevor Nunn...Bangay On the face of it, Tom Stoppard is the least autobiographical...Rock 'n' Roll." Had Stoppard returned from England to Communist...most notably Czech band the Plastic People of the Universe, whose 1976...
Tom Stoppard sees premiere of his drama in Czech National Theatre.
News wire article from: Europe Intelligence Wire February 22, 2007 700+ words
...British playwright Tom Stoppard tonight watched the Czech...the live performance of the Plastic People of the Universe, a legendary...Vaculik and Milan Kundera. Stoppard was born as Tomas Straeussler...in his former motherland. Stoppard has written three dramas about...
Legendary Czech rock band Plastic People applauded in London.
News wire article from: Europe Intelligence Wire January 25, 2007 700+ words
...underground rock band Plastic People of the Universe, which...during the trial. The Plastic People of the Universe then...of Czech origin Tom Stoppard, Rock'N'Roll...saw a performance of Stoppard's play in Royal Court...
Tom Stoppard and his First Biographer.(Double Act: A Life of Tom Stoppard)(Book...
Magazine article from: Contemporary Review Karwowski, Michael December 1, 2002 700+ words
Double Act: A Life of Tom Stoppard. Ira Nadel. Methuen. [pounds...ISBN 0-413-73050-6. Tom Stoppard is arguably the world's greatest...writer. On July 3rd this year, Stoppard celebrated his sixty-fifth birthday...
Writing the life of Tom Stoppard.(Critical Essay)
Magazine article from: Journal of Modern Literature Nadel, Ira B. December 22, 2004 700+ words
...Aspern Papers In writing the life of Tom Stoppard, I have discovered two subjects: the "Practical Stoppard," an empirically minded dramatist...identity who might be labelled "Practically Stoppard." This latter phrase can mean several...
Mind over matter.(playwright Tom Stoppard)
Magazine article from: Newsweek Kroll, Jack April 3, 1995 700+ words
...Theater: In an age of sound bites, Tom Stoppard, whose `Arcadia' arrives this week...demanding that they turn on their brains Tom Stoppard is a seducer with a difference. He...except it's not quite that kind of fun. Stoppard's most carnal embraces are for ideas...
Stoppard Pays a Visit to 'Utopia', THE MOSCOW TIMES.
News wire article from: The America's Intelligence Wire August 22, 2003 700+ words
...Byline: Leon Harris, Michael Holmes Stoppard at the Premukhino estate, the setting...Central Russia -- British playwright Tom Stoppard is drinking tea in a cafe in Tver reflecting...century anarchist and revolutionary. Stoppard is on his way back to Moscow where he...
my generation; Rufus Sewell gets ready to play Tom Stoppard's alter ego in Rock...
Magazine article from: Vogue November 1, 2007 700+ words
Tom Stoppard long ago put to rest the shibboleth that...guilty about bumming a ride on it," Stoppard says. "Everything goes up a gear when...After four decades in the _theater, Stoppard, whose breathtaking Coast of Utopia...
For more facts and information, see all results
©2009 Gale, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
About us | FAQs | Contact us | Privacy policy | Terms and conditions
Other Gale sites: Encyclopedia.com | HighBeam Research | Acquire Content | Books & Authors | Goliath | MovieRetriever | Smart QandA