RECHNITZ (DER WÜRGEENGEL)

Original titleRECHNITZ (DER WÜRGEENGEL)
CategoryPlay
AgegroupAdults
CastCast is not defined
CommentVariable gender distribution
Variable cast sizeYes
RepresentationNordic representation
LanguagesEnglish, German

At a party, late in the evening someone grabs a gun and, on a whim, kills nearly 200 people. Is this even conceivable? I think not, apart from visions of horror. Nevertheless, research showed that this is exactly what once happened. On the night of March 25, 1945, Countess Margit of Batthyany, a Thyssen heiress, was giving a party at her castle in Rechnitz near the Austro-Hungarian border to officers of the SS, heads of the Gestapo and local Nazi collaborators. Around midnight approximately 200 Jewish forced labourers were gathered and shot dead by a bunch of drunks. Shortly thereafter, the assassins fled the country. The castle of Rechnitz went up in flames, the Russians invaded the area. After the war, witnesses to the massacre have disappeared, criminal prosecution leads nowhere. To this day the 200 bodies have not been discovered – but does anyone really want them to be found?
Elfriede Jelinek goes in search of clues, but not as an historian; using Luis Bunuel’s “The Exterminating Angel” as a template, Rechnitz has messengers push their way into a room that none of them will ever leave again. They report the gruesome deed, by way of repetitions, variations and contradictions, they try to put the unspeakable into words, circle around the monstrosity without reaching its core. This creates a dense, multi-layered depiction of events, full of penetrating questions and it remains impenetrable.