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PRIVATE
JOKES, PUBLIC PLACES
A provocative
and hilarious glimpse into the world of contemporary architecture,
Private Jokes, Public Places opened as the inaugural production
at the Theatre at the Center for Architecture in New York City on
November 5, 2003. Sexual tensions and intellectual pretensions intertwine
as a graduate student defends her thesis for a public swimming pool
to an all-male jury. As the son of renowned architect Moshe Safdie
and a former architecture student himself, Oren Safdie uses his extensive
knowledge of the industry to capture the full character of architectural
discourse as well as examine issues ranging from sexism and race to
academia and the failure of postmodernist culture. The play asks compelling
questions about the state of the male-female power struggle, fears
of disrupting the status quo, and ultimately, the importance of challenging
tradition.

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