DON'T MENTION CASABLANCA is playwright Michelanne Forster's powerful true story of the explosive love affair between her Jewish grandmother and her famous grandfather Michael Curtiz, the director of Casablanca and many other Hollywood classics.
Making its world debut on The Court Theatre's stage on 11 September, DON'T MENTION CASABLANCA reveals a journey of love, determination and sacrifice as it follows Forster's grandmother Thilde and her son to Curtiz from Vienna to Hollywood, as the shadow of Hitler falls across Europe. Mihaly Kertesz left Europe in 1926 having made 70 films. Once in Hollywood, working for Warner Brothers as Michael Curtiz, he made an additional 101 films, including the Oscar winning Casablanca. Thilde Foerster, a screenwriter in her own right, battled with Curtiz across continents and going to extraordinary lengths to gain child support for her son by him. "My father only gave me his blessing to write DON'T MENTION CASABLANCA after I convinced him the story about his mother was an heroic one," says Forster. "Without taking the risks she did, Thilde, her brother Ludwig and my father could have ended up in a gas chamber like 70,000 other Viennese Jews. Kertesz may have won Oscars but my grandmother kept the family alive."Artistic Director of The Court Theatre Ross Gumbley is proud that The Court is presenting the world première of Forster's "best work yet". Gumbley says, "An early version of DON'T MENTION CASABLANCA was presented as a rehearsed reading in The Forge last year, and it was clear from the quality of the work and the audience response that we had to put on this play. It has been an honour bringing this work to life on the stage."Lara Macgregor plays Thilde, who "goes from being an unconventional and rebellious girl with conservative Jewish parents to an unmarried mother striving to secure a future for her family. She is a remarkably complex woman who makes choices of incredible bravery." Paul McLaughlin plays Curtiz, who has found "the mix of humour (Curtiz was known for his bombastic outbursts and mangling of English sayings) and intense flaws a brilliant character to play."Videos