<p>In Vichy France, 1942, a group of men sit outside an office, waiting to be interviewed. The reason they have been pulled off the street and taken there is obvious enough. They are, for the most part, Jews. But how serious an offence this is, and how they are to suffer for it, is not clear, and they hope for the best. But as rumours pass between them of trains full of people locked from the outside and furnaces in Poland, and although they reassure themselves that nothing so monstrous could be true, their panic rises.<br><br>Arthur Miller's claustrophobic play of how the inconceivable becomes allowed to pass, <i>Incident at Vichy</i> is one of the most indispensable, moving pieces of art about the Holocaust.</p>
<p>In Vichy France, 1942, a group of men sit outside an office, waiting to be interviewed. The reason they have been pulled off the street and taken there is obvious enough. They are, for the most part, Jews. But how serious an offence this is, and how they are to suffer for it, is not clear, and they hope for the best. But as rumours pass between them of trains full of people locked from the outside and furnaces in Poland, and although they reassure themselves that nothing so monstrous could be true, their panic rises.<br><br>Arthur Miller's claustrophobic play of how the inconceivable becomes allowed to pass, <i>Incident at Vichy</i> is one of the most indispensable, moving pieces of art about the Holocaust.</p>