An Enemy of the People
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"An Enemy of the People" to be Presented by Theatre
Department
Henric Ibsen’s classic tale of morals and ethics, An Enemy of the People, is
as vivid and poignant today as when it was written in the 1880s. Belhaven’s
theatre department presents this powerful drama at 7:30 p.m. on April 19, 20 and
21, in Girault
Auditorium. Ticketed seating: admission, $7; students, $5.
An Enemy of the People
THE
STORY: The year is 1882. Kirstin Springs, a small Norwegian coastal
village has just begun to win fame and wealth through its medicinal spring
waters. Dr. Stockmann, having recently returned to the home of his youth is
resident physician in charge. He discovers that the waters are contaminated and
dangerous. On receiving proof of this, he immediately reports to his associates,
the town officials most immediately affected. The Doctor is shocked to find that
instead of being thanked, he is looked upon as a dangerous crank, motivated by a
desire to prove that his fellow townsmen are wrong, and to bring ruin upon them.
As the people who run the local paper and the town officials (among them his
brother who is the mayor) do their utmost to urge secrecy and compromise, the
determined Doctor realizes that the honesty and idealism he has counted upon to
make the truth prevail, simply do not exist in the face of selfish
"practical" interests. The press will not report his findings; the
officials refuse to give him a hearing; he loses his position and the
townspeople boycott him; ultimately his wife and children are cut off from all
contact with friends and neighbors. Almost every weapon of offense and abuse is
brought to bear against the family -- blackmail, slander, and eviction from
their home. But all the time the Doctor, morally supported by his family,
carries on his magnificent fight for the truth. At the end the townspeople,
gathered outside the Stockmann home with torches, cast stones through the
windows. Stockmann addresses his family: "But remember now, everybody, you
are fighting for the truth and that is why you're alone. And that makes you
strong."