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January 24, 2012

Judith Malina — a founder and unsinkable bulwark of the Living Theater, a beacon of experimental performance in New York since 1947 — instigates another rebellion with “History of the World,” now at the troupe’s Lower East Side home. Though Ms. Malina, at 85, shows no loss of fight, there is something almost elegiac about her latest piece, no less than an exuberant, dizzying and exhausting flight through the course of Western civilization, peppered with political observations. Certainly Ms. Malina has earned the right to conduct such an ambitious survey.

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January 13, 2012

Soraya Broukhim and company in The History of the World (© Janne Hoem)"I am Socrates/They say I’m the wisest man alive/That’s why they condemned me to death/Because we always kill the wisest and the best: That simplistic speech is meant to be the point of Living Theatre’s latest play, grandiosely titled The History of the World.

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Backstage
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Mitch
Montgomery

January 13, 2012

"Who are you in history?" This circularly rhetorical question forms the backbone, flexible though it may be, of Judith Malina’s unfettered but ultimately unimposing interactive play "History of the World." A legendary stage artist, provocateur, and co-founder of the Living Theatre, there is surely no question who Malina is in history.

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Curtain Up
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Deirdre
Donovan

January 12, 2012

Judith Malina’s History of the World takes theatergoers on a whirlwind tour of history. But in compressing thousands of years into less than two hours, its historical personages get the dime-store treatment.

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Ny Theatre
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Mitchell
Conway

January 7, 2012

We can change history now! With a title audacious enough to warrant a parody film of a similar title, The Living Theatre’s newest production matches that boldness with its vision. Who are you in history? In The History of the World, written and directed by Judith Malina, that question is addressed by having the audience participate in significant historical events, flowing between being guided by the actors from scene to scene and directly creating the action. This dynamically reveals how, by watching the current historical moment, we can forget we are a part of it with the genuine capacity to take action.

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