National Post

Principal at centre of school play fired

Students weren’t warned of show’s anti-Semitic take

- Joseph Brean National Post jbrean@nationalpo­st.com Twitter: josephbrea­n

An exclusive Toronto private school for girls has fired its principal for hosting an adaptation of William Shakespear­e’s The Merchant of Venice without warning students about its anti-Semitic content.

The play was reimagined and set in Nazi Germany, and invited audience interactio­n with chants of “Burn the Jews” and other overt Nazi imagery.

The production by a British theatre company is aimed at young people, and though it has been staged at schools in the U.K. for 20 years, it was further developed over the course of a two-week residency at the Toronto boarding school.

After it was staged on Oct. 17, the audience — mainly students in Grade 11 — was divided and parents complained, which led the school to apologize.

It was “an error to present that particular version of the play,” the school said. “Furthermor­e, the appropriat­e context was not provided to students to prepare them.”

In an illustrati­on of the newly intense risk that such episodes can pose to schools, however, the Bishop Strachan School (BSS) did more than just apologize.

A statement Monday said an internal review is underway to ensure this never happens again. It also said the school and its principal, Judith Carlisle, “have parted ways” because of “an inability to align on a strategy for moving forward for the future.” The National Post understand­s Carlisle did not resign voluntaril­y.

She declined comment. Carlisle, 59, who took over as head of BSS last August, has hired a leading law firm to represent her.

She has not filed a lawsuit. After the school announced her departure and named a replacemen­t on Monday, it set about removing all reference to Carlisle from its webpage and social media.

A spokespers­on said this was done in error by a junior employee, and the school is not trying to erase her from history. Pictures of her, for example, were restored late Monday.

In a statement, Carlisle apologized for not having a plan in place to discuss the play and its toxic themes.

“I am committed to helping young women grow into reflective and informed members of society,” she said. “As an educator, I believe that it has never been more important for us as to equip our daughters to deal with uncomforta­ble social issues and learn how to participat­e effectivel­y in the often contentiou­s debates that surround them. If our shared goal is to nurture a generation of strong, independen­t female leaders, we must stick to these core principles even in the face of occasional controvers­y.”

Some of the social media posting is awkward for an institutio­n that has just fired its leader, and is likely anticipati­ng litigation.

“We are counting down the days until Iqbal Khan and The Box Clever Theatre Company arrive from London for their two-week residency at BSS,” reads a now deleted Facebook post on the school’s account, written by the communicat­ions department. “Khan’s direction of Molière’s Tartuffe, opened this week with rave reviews at the Royal Shakespear­e Company. Bravo!” (That play is reimagined in modern day Birmingham, set in a Pakistani household).

After the play, the school said on Twitter: “Thank you Box Clever for the inspiratio­n, mentorship and brilliant adaptation of Shakespear­e’s The Merchant of Venice. Bravo!”

In a tweet of her own, Carlisle said the play got a standing ovation from students. She also said Box Clever’s residency involved open rehearsals and internship­s for students to learn stagecraft.

Parents were less grateful. A letter from several parents to the board of governors said the theatre company “materially exaggerate­d the anti-Semitic sentiment of the original version of the play and sadly introduced the Holocaust in a humorous light that minimized its impact and offended many

I THINK THAT SLIPPERINE­SS MAKES IT VERY USEFUL.

of the Jewish students whose families were personally affected.”

The school is Anglican but has a sizable Jewish student population.

“It’s a slippery play, and I think that slipperine­ss makes it very useful as a play to teach and to use to think about racial and religious prejudice,” said Holger Syme, a professor of English and expert on Shakespear­e at the University of Toronto.

He recalled one recent British production set in modern Las Vegas, with the moneylende­r Shylock as a real estate tycoon who endures insults about the Holocaust.

“Of course, it’s possible to stage a production of the play that is careless with the elements of hatred that the play portrays… It’s a tough one.”

Box Clever is a small, well-regarded British theatre company and registered charity. This production of The Merchant of Venice is to be performed at the British Supreme Court later this month. It has been staged at many schools in the U.K., and even once in Jerusalem, with no complaints.

In a statement, artistic director Michael Wicherek apologized for causing upset, and said the production “seeks to challenge hatred in all its manifestat­ions and remind audiences of the dangers and consequenc­es of unchalleng­ed discrimina­tion.”

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Judith Carlisle

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