“Cabaret” to Examine Questions of Creative Expression
Oct. 23, 2025
Author: Adam Goldstein
The power of art, expression and self-acceptance underlies the historical cues in “Cabaret.”
The 1951 musical by John Kander, Fred Ebb and Joe Masteroff is set in Berlin in the waning days of the Weimar Republic as the Nazi party rose to power and violently shifted the course of German culture and world history. Many of the show’s main characters are the final refugees of the Jazz Age, artists condemned and crushed under the weight of authoritarianism and fascism.
It’s a very specific moment in time, one brought to life by Masteroff’s richly drawn character—the cabaret performer Sally Bowles, the American writer Clifford Bradshaw and the anonymous Master of Ceremonies of the Kit Kat Club—a larger-than-life narrator whose arc in the show neatly sums up the tragic arc of German history in late 1929 and early 1930.