THEATRE

REVIEW: Here There are Blueberries

Anonymous photos depict a side of life not seen before at Auschwitz

Geraldine Alexander, Clifford Samuel, Philippine Velge and Paksie Vernon in Here There Are Blueberries at Stratford East (2026) © Mark Senior

Here There are Blueberries is a stunning new theatre play that made its UK debut at Stratford East theatre.

Written by Moisés Kaufman, it tells the remarkable, and true, story of a photo album that set in a motion of a chain of events that revealed a completely new, and very revealing, side of life in the Auschwitz concentration camp.

It is set in 2007, when an anonymous person sent an album featuring Nazi-era photographs to a US Holocaust Memorial Museum archivist. As curators unravelled the shocking truth behind the images, the album soon made headlines and ignited a debate that reverberated far beyond the museum walls.

Painstaking research revealed that the album was a unique, never before seen, record of the lives of the Nazi men and women living in the camp. Their life was peppered with pleasure including stays in a holiday home, with food and luxuries at their disposal. But most importantly, by analysing and studying the images from each of the photos, the archivists could definitively show that everyone, regardless of their role in the camp, was complicit and knew precise details about the horrors and murders taking place in Auschwitz.

The title of the play is taken from one of the photos when a line-up of the “girls” who worked in the camp’s admin department are each eating a bowl of blueberries. One girl is pictured “crying” from her “distress” at her bowl being empty because she has finished eating all of her fruit.

The cast of Here There Are Blueberries at Stratford East (2026) © Mark Senior

The play is beautifully performed with wonderful staging and lighting and shows how the actions of the Nazis can still reverberate through the generations. The storyline reveals how, when the story of the album is publicised in the press, one photograph is seen by a young man who, to his horror, recognises his grandfather. The audience sees the impact the revelation has on his life.

A haunting and salutary story, co-written by Venezuelan-American theatre director and filmmaker Moisés Kaufman and conceived and directed by him, with the Tectonic Theatre Project. The play raises many questions and moral issues. In recognition of this some performances were followed by Q and A sessions to help audience members explore the complex issues raised in the play.

 

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