100 YEARS AGO, New York City experienced its most devastating workplace tragedy before 9/11. In the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire, 146
immigrant girls, mostly Jewish and Italian, died trying to escape flames
that roared through the upper floors of a garment factory near
Washington Square. Trapped behind locked doors, many never had a chance
to escape. Others jumped out the windows, some hand-in-hand, their hair
and clothes aflame. The Triangle Fire became an unparalleled catalyst
for social reform. Public outrage over the event galvanized the
progressive movement, women's suffrage, and instigated many of the
reforms of The New Deal. The Centennial commemoration of the fire
presents a unique opportunity for New Yorkers to honor those who lost
their lives at Triangle and provides an important moment for the city
and the country to reflect on the legacy of "The fire that changed
America."
"From the Fire," a new work created by the Tony nominated
composer, Elizabeth Swados, writer/director, Cecilia Rubino, the
poet, Paula Finn, and designed by Bonnie Roche-Bronfman, will dramatize
the history of the Triangle Shirtwaist Fire and bring the event into the
21st century. The dramatic oratorio, sponsored by Eugene Lang College
The New School for Liberal Arts, will be performed two blocks from the
fire at the historic Judson Memorial Church on Washington Square during
the week of Triangle's 100th Anniversary, March 23rd through March 27th,
2011.