(JEWISH GROUP) What happens when you're the only Jewish family in Oklahoma?
When her mother Clara dies suddenly of a stroke, Emily is left with her ashes and a note to scatter them on Sylvias farm in Chandler, Oklahoma. Theres a problem: Emily has no idea who Sylvia is and has never been to Oklahoma before in her life and as far as she knows, neither had her mom.
Oklahoma Samovar, a new play opening at La MaMas Downstairs Theater, starts at the end of Emilys trip to find Sylvia, who turns out to be an old woman with a bit of a memory issue and the sister of Emilys grandmother Rose. When Emily asks why her mother would want her ashes left on the farm, Sylvia launches into their family history. She goes all the way back to 1887, when Emilys great-grandparents Jake and Hattie fled persecution in Latvia with nothing but a feather bed and a samovar, and unfolds the stories of each generation over the plays acts.
While most immigration stories usually focus on big cities, Oklahoma Samovar explores the little-known history of Jews in the Midwest in a deeply-human way. It is a tender portrayal of an immigrant family struggling to survive and figuring out their identity over multiple generations. Instead of villanizing or lionizing its characters, Oklahoma Samovar presents people with all their complexities, allowing them moments of moral failing while portraying them with empathy.
A fictional drama based on her own family history, playwright Alice Eve Cohen considers the play her foundational work.
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