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By
Alison Ireland.
The
Playhouse has hosted some fantastic sets recently, and last night's
was no exception. The stage was transformed into a high-class, high-storey
Manhattan hotel room, with stars above and all the night lights
and noises of the big city below. An old man with a strong German
accent potters about in bare feet聟we then discover (if we have
not already read the programme notes) that this appears to be Albert
Einstein. During a bizarre, yet somehow not surreal, night, he is
at intervals joined by Joseph McArthy (of McArthy trials fame),
Marilyn Monroe and her then-husband Joe DiMaggio.
This
fictional meeting of the four celebrities is a fascinating premise
for a play which toys with scientific theories, philosophical ideas
and the purpose of existence. In a famously funny scene, Monroe
explains the Specific Theory of Relativity to Einstein using toy
trains and balloons; in another McCarthy indulges in a heavy-handed
spot of solipsism. This is a play which does demand some knowledge
of the characters (despite the fact that they are never named at
all, but merely described as The Actress, The Professor etc.) otherwise
I feel that its emotional significance would be lost. Moreover,
it explores the nature of fame and celebrity as much as anything
else, and specifically in relation to these historical characters.
The
acting was excellent (though I did initially have my doubts about
McCarthy's southern American accent), with particularly strong performances
from Nicholas Le Prevost as Einstein and Patrick O'Kane as DiMaggio
- the latter really raised the tension of the action, adding both
passion and poignancy. However, while 'Insignificance' is interesting
and worth seeing, I left the theatre with a sense of having witnessed
the author playing with his intellectual toys rather than with his
audience's heartstrings. Discuss.
The
views expressed in these comments are those of the contributor's
and not the 成人快手.
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