Playing at Water Tower Theatre in Addison, The Diary of Anne Frank (dramatized by Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett) is a poignant, subtle, excruciating condemnation of anti-Semitism and intolerance, told without extremity, didacticism or manipulation. Anne Frank, a teenager who could be any religion, really, has been forced into hiding with her sister, Margot, and her parents, Otto and Edith. Like thousands of other young girls passing into adolescence, she is brash, self-absorbed, mischievous, curious about romance and sex, drawn to her father and resentful of her mother. We see her struggling with these issues and feel a sharp tug, because we know it’s all just part of the process. None of it would seem so bad, if it were not for the extraordinary circumstances.














Comments