Eleanor's Story: An American Girl in Hitler's Germany

solo performance · offending shadows · Ages 12+ · United States of America

one person show
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Review by NEAL WEAVER

June 11, 2015

My overall impression

This review first appeared on atageraw.com.

Eleanor’s Story – An American Girl in Hitler’s Germany

Reviewed by Neal Weaver

Theatre of NOTE

Through June 27

RECOMMENDED:

Eleanor and her family were victims of a near-fatal case of bad timing. Her parents had emigrated from Germany, and settled in Stratford, New Jersey, where Eleanor and her brother were born. In the mid-1930s, her father received a job offer that seemed too good to turn down, though it meant returning to Germany for two years. They set off in 1939, only to discover on the boat, halfway to Europe, that Germany had invaded Poland and declared war on England and France. They wanted to return to America immediately, but things got complicated. Mom had never bothered to change her citizenship, and as a German citizen, she was not allowed to leave the country. The family was unwilling to leave without her, so they were stuck in enemy territory for the duration of World War II.

Writer-performer Ingrid Garner is Eleanor’s granddaughter, and she has shaped her grandmother’s story into a compelling first-person narrative. At first, for Eleanor, at 9 years old, the situation seemed more an exciting adventure than a threat. But as the war dragged on, food and manufactured goods became scarce, and the family struggled to hold on to its American identity, even as they pretended to be good Germans. When the bombing of Berlin began, their neighborhood was almost leveled, and they had to weather the harrowing battle of Berlin, and the violent arrival of the Soviets.

Garner is a skillful writer and an accomplished performer, and her response to her material is richly emotional, providing a sharp sense of what it was like to actually be there in those troubled and dangerous times.

Theatre of NOTE, 1517 N. Cahuenga Blvd., Hlywd.; http://hff15.org/2256.

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