1/ against t ity." y 6 :Mnmdhmmmh;mm "t‘s about an elderty man who is tracked down and brought to justice 50 years after doing the things he‘s done as & young man. He‘s gone through many changes, and cannot recognize the person he was in the person he is now. wmmb.m::; son â€" a new man. And then he‘s confronted with things. That‘s confusing to me." says Reed, who was in town this week for the play‘s opening. the Holocaust. Since I was very young, N:Fv ries I‘ve read. The horrific injustice â€" the thought that human beings could do such things to other human beings â€" has always been to me a darkest mystery. And so my sympathy has always been with the people who gave their lives to try to find these criminals hM:dLu.MTm&mrwybn miering this month at its Water Street Theatre, vetâ€" eran actor Ted Follows plays Rudi Vanderwaal, aretired Canadian whose quiet existence is shattered when he is suddenty accused of Nazi war crimes in his former being a war criminal â€" sommething happened that made me realize that he was also a human being," Reed says. "I was put into a turmoil of understanding when | realized he profoundly wasn‘t any different from me or my grandfather or my uncles. And that is how Reed decided, as a playwright, to m«umé{hmflnuï¬duaa , but as human. â€" â€" . Jar. > Th-minhnmw.m Chuck Pereen playing Pastor Jake who, like u.mmmugruum man, the Dutch Jew who has hunted down Vanderwaal and accused him of war crimes. Doris O‘Dell plays Vanâ€" derwaal‘s wife Netty, who finds herself married to someone she never knew. "I didn‘t write this play to tell the answers I knew, | wrote this play because I had questions," Reed says. "So over here, | set out to create a character who could be me who is hunting down a Nazi criminal. And over here, | set out to create a character who could be me who has a past that he is ashamed of. And over here, I set out to create a character who could be me "When such an incident happened in my comâ€" Mâ€"Mammmmmmmdd Mwmnawsmgemmm ' M'Mmmgform' mndgis community. And he realizes that members of certain sectors of the community may approach the play with different preconceived attitudes. But his hopes are that . everyone who sees the play will approach it with an opmnind.andwilmiermï¬na:mmnï¬oml impact he experienced while wri 8 abommisplaymzdtrm'g,'l'mnott?uhgwmat.’l know what they‘re going to say and it‘s not going to be nice‘," Reed says. "And }.can imagine someone who is .â€". Jewish seeing a swastika on the poster, or hearing that nbmam%mmm? ® sympathetically, thinking, ‘I‘m not going to â€" 4 that play‘. And I can see someone in the Mennonite. . [‘ dnynnd(ormwmâ€"rmmmw . see that‘. And I would hope that those people _ somehow end up coming to the play anyway, because i: don‘t make all the characters perfect by any means. They‘re all human, and so that means there‘s a miture . of strengths and weakness in them. But I really believe . they‘re all human." R (mwwa“wmmvm' IN Centre "’llmmm uflMm19.TMm$15hradtmm 4 for students and seniors. Tickets are half price on . © Tmmfwmmwm.rom&p by phone, call the box office at 571â€"0928. .: . . _