How Tom Stoppard’s Leopoldstadt Made Rob Brunner ’93 Confront His Family’s Holocaust History
Bard alum Rob Brunner ’93, politics and culture editor at the Washingtonian magazine, writes about how Tom Stoppard’s Tony Award–winning play Leopoldstadt—which follows the story of the Merz family, a wealthy, deeply assimilated family of Viennese Jews, from the cultural heyday of Vienna’s pre-war period, through two world wars, and their terrifying aftermath—made him finally confront his own family's tragic history. Brunner’s grandparents, also Viennese Jews, fled their beloved city in 1938, shortly after the Nazis annexed Austria, evaded the Gestapo through a chance meeting, secretly crossed the French border into Paris, and miraculously received two American refugee visas on August 31, 1939, one day before Hitler invaded Poland and started World War II. The rest of his grandparents’ Viennese family, like most of the Merz family in Stoppard’s play, did not survive. “None of it felt like it belonged to me. That was a delusion that I held onto for too long . . . ” writes Brunner of his family’s Holocaust story. “But had the cousins survived, they would have been my family, my son’s family. They would have come over for Thanksgiving dinner; I might have been friends with their children. Their loss isn’t some abstraction, I have finally come to realize. It’s my loss, too.”
Post Date: 12-02-2024
Post Date: 12-02-2024