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Production History:

Staged Performances:

Aug 13 - 29, 2004  FringeNYC festival @ the Michael Schimmel Center for the Arts

Concert Performances:

Apr. 8, 2002, The Club at La MaMa ETC

Sep 8, 2002, song excerpt (Hope) sung by the choir of Middle Collegiate Church on 2nd Ave & 7th Street

Sep. 11, 2002, The Village Temple on 12th Street

Sep 23, 2002, TheClub at La MaMa ETC

Jan 21, 2003, NY Quarterly Meeting (Quakers) at Riverside Church

Dec 14, 2003 Manhattan Meeting (Quakers) at 15th Street Meeting House
THE SONG OF JOB 9:11
formerly "9/11 - The Book of Job"
Book, Music and Lyrics: Danny Ashkenasi
Spoken text adapted from the Book of Job (King James, revised)
and various news media publications

Chapters and Verses:

Awake
I'm Alive
A Prayer for the Dying
Another Hundred Voices
Brave New World
Last Exit to Nowhere
Lay Down in Shadow
Divine Intervention
Chorale: the voice from the whirlwind
Hope
BACKSTAGE REVIEW
- Elias Stimac  (quoted in full)

A stark and compelling new musical work appeared at the Fringe Festival this year, one that honors the memory of loved ones lost in one of the darkest days in recent history.  "9/11 - The Book of Job" is the creation of Danny Ashkenasi, who wrote the music, book and lyrics to the production.  He has forged a powerful testament both to the nature of despair and the indomitable will of mankind, culminating in a cathartic finale.

Subtitled "A Musical Convocation in 10 Chapters," the
moving musical is told from the perspective of the bystanders who watched the towers fall that fateful day.  They ponder their existence and place in the world.  Juxtaposed with this crosssection of modern America are the figures of Job and his wife, survivors from a different era.  The image of the biblical hero standing among the businessmen and women is an indelible one that won't soon be forgotten.

Ashkenasi staged his own work, and the challenging concept reached fruition under his guidance.  His cast proved to be an
accomplished chorus of voices.  Joel Briel and Jamie Mathews were the Old Testament couple who try not to question God despite the afflictions he sends.  Allison Easter, Jason Lanyard, and Mark Peters portrayed a trio of "suits" with authoritative presence.

Behind the scenes,
Bethany Porter beautifully played Ashkenasi's haunting melodies on the piano, and Lynne Marlowe choreographed the meticulous movement in the piece (in collaboration with Ashkenasi).  The credible costume choices we the contribution of Diane Specisio and the lighting design was the inspired work of Grant Yaeger,
pictured:  Joel Briel and Jamie Mathews as Job and Job's Wife
IN DEPTH REVIEW

The following is an excerpt of an article Suzanne Travers
originally wrote  for a journalism class.
She now works for the N.J. Herald News
- Danny Ashkenasi

Suzanne Travers' article about 9/11 - The Book of Job:

New Musical Remembers September 11, Chapter and Verse

It will of course seem an overstatement to say that
9/11: The Book of Job is a show the entire city needs
to see. Inevitably, there are New Yorkers for whom
this beautiful and soul-filling musical, which
interlaces text from the Bible's Book of Job with news
reports and eyewitness accounts of September 11, will
lack accessibility or appeal. But at its debut
performance April 8 at the East Village theater La
Mama ETC, the audience's response -- five solid
minutes of steady applause -- resembled the tight
embrace of an old friend at a funeral, a display
infused with solemnity and encouragement, shared
history and shared sorrow. As the first theater piece
to deal broadly with the terrorist attacks and their
aftermath, 9/11: The Book of Job is a moving,
challenging memorial to that day, its many victims,
and the profound questions it provoked. 

For both its poetry and its plot, the Book of Job
proves an inspired point of departure for a meditation
on September 11. The preeminent "when bad things
happen to good people" tale, the story tells of Job,
an upstanding, wealthy, devout man whose children are
killed and his property and health destroyed without
apparent reason, and his struggle to confront God and
understand his suffering. In 9/11: The Book of Job,
the Job character by turns seems to symbolize the
victims in the towers, their surviving loved ones, and
America itself. 

Yet it is the biblical language of Job that offers
such powerful and eerie counterpoints to the 9/11
experience, and Danny Ashkenasi, 9/11:The Book of
Job's composer, has done a fine job drawing out poetic
imagery that speaks to the destruction at Ground Zero.
"The pit is naked before God, the place of destruction
has no covering/The pillars of heaven tremble, and are
astounded at his rebuke." Many phrases are
cringe-worthy, and in effect lose the specificity of
the Job story in favor of words that resonate with
theTowers' collapse. In a line that could easily apply to
the suicide bombers, Job asks God "Why endow with life
the bitter souls whose only joy is to die?"

Mr. Ashkenasi opens the piece with Job Chapter 9,
Verse 11: "Lo, he passes by me and I see him not, he
moves on, but I do not perceive him." Though the text
refers to God, the words inspire a range of
associations, evoking the stealth of the highjackers,
New Yorkers passing each other on the morning commute
before the planes hit, the perhaps naive innocence of
the pre-9/11 U.S.
 
The spoken word is layered throughout the original
songs and lyrics of 9/11: The Book of Job.
Accompanying the stirring text of Job are painfully
fresh, mostly first-person accounts of where people
were, and what they saw, heard, and felt as the
attacks unfolded. Culled from reports in The New York
Times and NPR, the excerpts run
together in two simultaneously-spoken monologues that
magnify both the poignancy of such accounts and their
ability to overwhelm. "I was having breakfast at a
small restaurant on West Broadway" "I was sitting
before my computer terminal on the 52nd floor" "I was
on the 81st floor when we felt the collision." The
accounts are read sotto voce by two performers while
the rest of the choir sings "Another Hundred Voices,"
an homage to Sondheim that reminds us that while each
one of us has his or her own story, part of 9/11 was
taking in so many other people's stories too.

In a similar vein, Mr. Ashkenasi's work reminds us how
much technology shaped our experience of the attacks,
to say nothing of our ability to replay and remember
them. Even well-publicized voicemails don't fail to
astonish: "Hey Jules, it's Brian, I'm on a plane and
it's highjacked and it doesn't look so good. I just
wanted to let you know that I love you and I hope to
see you again. If I don't please have fun in life and
live your life the best that you can."
The urgency and bizarre immediacy of the contemporary
speech of the news accounts and first-person
testimonials is balanced by the old English of the
King James version of the Bible, which by contrast
seems out of this world, mystical and ritualistic. Yet
9/11: The Book of Job also shows how news reports and
everyday speech became hallowed centers of their own
ritual. For many New Yorkers, New York Times Portraits
of Grief became daily required reading, an action
like Catholicism's chanting of the litany of the
saints. Rather than being a documentarian, Mr.
Ashkenasi's libretto captures the ritualistic and
linguistic dimensions of all this tremendous
outpouring of words.

For all the intimacy of such glimpses of individual
lives, from start to finish the attacks of September
11 could also be called the experience of mass murder
via mass media. Yet just eight months removed from
that experience, it is astonishing how much of the
everyday detail one can forget, and how much Mr.
Ashkenasi forces us to recall. One of the most
remarkable aspects of Mr. Ashkenasi's libretto is how
comprehensive it is, and how vividly it evokes the
specific details and mood of September 11 and the
weeks that followed. Mr. Ashkenasi began his research
in early October and had finished the musical by
January. While recent television programs such as
HBO's "In Memoriam" offer a documentarian's view of
9/11, 9/11: The Book of Job's scope is more sweeping.
To its credit, its search for the meanings (or lack of
meanings) of September 11 extends to the political
aftermath. 

Hence 9/11: The Book of Job is not all sad memorial. A
couple of jaunty songs, "Brave New World" and "Last
Exit to Nowhere," satirize American patriotism's
detour into commercialism and jingoism not long after
the attacks. Mr. Ashkenasi's syncopated lyrics note
"the top cop politician tango/swapping wild west white
house jingoish lingo/bearing lock stock double fisted
barrels/born to walk the talk get caught in a
quarrel." And from the Land's End catalogue he has
pulled a gem of a quote, earnest in a way only big
business can be: "Over the past weeks we've received
inquiries from customers about the possibilty of
embroidering the American flag on Land's End
merchandise. We do have this capability and, in
response to these inquiries, we have decided to offer
this service without charge on the items shown below.
At this time, unfortunately, we are not able to
process these orders online..." 

Surprisingly, it is in his more political songs that
Mr. Ashkenasi brings us back to a key theological
theme of Job. What role does God play in such
suffering as the city experienced September 11?
Following Job's lead, Mr. Ashkenasi dismisses the
suggestion in appearances by Osama Bin Laden and
George W. Bush that God sides with either jihad or the
war on terrorism. One of the messages of Job is that
God doesn't work this way. Mr. Ashkenasi also draws a
keen parallel between the response of Job's friends
that he must have done something wrong, provoking
divine punishment, and the view that America was
somehow to blame for the attacks. "Think now, who that
was innocent ever perished? Or where were the upright
cut off?" they ask. Such sentiment was issued from
across the political spectrum, taking its most extreme
versions in statements by the Reverend Jerry Falwell,
who blamed homosexuality and abortion in America for
inciting God's wrath, and Susan Sontag, who blamed
America's global policies. If anything, the moral for
Mr. Ashkenasi is that God plays no real role in these
human events, or if he does, it is a mystery to us.
Like Job, Mr. Ashkenasi's view is that "It is all
beyond me. I melt into silence."

9/11: The Book of Job is an intelligent pop musical.
Written for twelve singers, the work is "technically
an oratorio, a choral piece with solos that tells a
Biblical story." At La Mama, it was performed with
piano accompaniment. Each song tells a story, and
although there are connections from song to song no
plot runs throughout the work. Still, each song is
meant to evoke an emotion, there is  a progression -
from Awake! to hope - still there is resolution. Like
Hair, Godspell, Jesus Christ Superstar in this respect
beautiful music, evocative language, ritual   It is no
accident that Mr. Ashkenasi thinks of it as a kind of
requium, a piece that can mark that day.

Infused as it is with Biblical text and religious
form, it makes sense to perform the piece, as Mr.
Ashkenasi intends to, in churches and temples."Doing
it in a place of worship makes sense because it
follows a structure that various denominations relate
to," he says. 9/11: The Book of Job is already booked
for the Village Temple on the anniversary of September
11, and Mr. Ashkenasi is in the process of lining up
other performances in the month of September. Houses of
worship may use the piece as a fundraiser or as a way
to celebrate the memorial.


HOPE

I believe in the good of mankind
I believe in the end truth prevails
It resides in our hearts and our minds
Should we seek it we'd find love unveiled

I have heard of a light strange and strong
It embraces the seas and the skies
Touching all, high or low, right or wrong
And in time it may blaze in my eyes

I believe there will always be hope         
          -
Like a light hid behind angry skies
I believe there will always be pain         
         
- There's a song in the saddest of cries
Though at times I may struggle to cope       
          
- Though the world is a perilous place
I believe life is never in vain                  
         
- Life endows us with moments of grace

I have stared at the visage of dread         
        
- There is more than just evil and good
And I fear what a soul has to face         
         
- So much more than can be understood
Yet for all of the living and dead         
        
- For the world is an island at night
I believe there's a loving embrace         
         
- That's enveloped in deep endless light

I believe in the good of mankind         
        
- I believe there will always be hope
I believe in the end truth prevails         
         
- I believe there will always be pain
It resides in our hearts and our minds         
         
- Though at times I may struggle to cope
Should we seek it we'd find love unveiled         
         
- I believe life is never in vain

I have heard of a light strange and strong         
        
- I have stared at the visage of dread
It embraces the seas and the skies         
         
- And I fear what a soul has to face
Touching all, high or low, right or wrong         
         
- Yet for all of the living and dead
And in time it may blaze in my eyes         
        
- I believe there's a loving embrace

Note:

Danny Ashkenasi has pledged to donate any proceeds earned as the writer of "The Song of Job 9:11" to appropriate charities and causes.