The Bomb - Second Blast: Present Dangers (1992-2012) - There Was a Man There Was No Man/Axis/Talk Talk Fight Fight/The Letter of Last Resort/From Elsewhere: On the Watch
Synopsis A contemporary take on the non-proliferation debate looking at Israel and Iran s nuclear capability, the "axis of evil" speech and its affect on North Korea, the U.K.'s continuing reliance on Trident in the post Cold War era, through to the current negotiations with Iran and weapons inspections there. The SECOND BLAST is part of THE BOMB - a partial history which is a season of plays in two parts and can be seen on consecutive nights or on an afternoon and evening over the weekend. Commissioned by the Tricycle The Bomb - a partial history is in two parts, is the political history of the Nuclear Bomb from 1940 to present-day Nuclear proliferation and its implications for the world now. Each of the two parts can be seen on consecutive nights or on an afternoon and evening over the weekend. Part of The Bomb - a partial history in two parts
Nicolas Kent bows out as artistic director of the Tricycle with a five-hour, two-part “partial history” of the atomic bomb, which has overshadowed our lives for the last half century.
Is it really only that long? And do we really remain so blasé about it? There are ten short plays by nine playwrights: Zinnie Harris tops and tails proceedings with a conversation piece for the German and Austrian scientists who discovered the fault in nuclear fission science and ended up monitoring underground nuclear facilities in Iran.
It’s a chilling and deeply disturbing progression. The plays are interspersed with verbatim research from Kent’s regular associate on his tribunal plays, Richard Norton-Taylor of the Guardian, who highlights David Cameron’s commitment to Trident and Shirley Williams’ concern at the miracle of nothing exploding… so far.
But we are running out of time, as the clock ticks away in the background of scenes in Westminster and the White House. The sharpest play, by David Greig, proposes the hilarious reality of a newly incumbent Prime Minister (Belinda Lang) writing the famous “letter of last resort” to the last submarine after London has been obliterated; this does happen. Should she advocate retaliation? Has Cameron?
Her foil is a mollifying civil servant played to perfection by Simon Chandler, who also crops up as Ron Hutchinson’s testy field marshal in a post-Potsdam face-off between Clement Atlee and the US, and an American soldier barging in on John Donnelly’s farcical Russian trade-off for a phallic warhead in the Ukrainian (here, Irish) countryside.
There’s a Shavian tonality about Amit Gupta’s take on India’s philosophical debate about building nuclear reactors, with Paul Bhattacharjee’s innovative professor movingly ceding his position of authority to a protégé (Tariq Jordan) prepared to live with political reality while he stays domiciled with Ghandi.
What is the point of nuclear weapons if you don’t use them, or hide behind them as a deterrent? This debate is slyly threaded through all of the plays, which vary in length from half an hour to ten minutes and leave their own little time bombs ticking away inside you.
Lee Blessing writes a satire in which the private club of nuclear powers (you need an illuminated egg to join) is infiltrated by lesser countries through the agency of China. Colin Teevan narrows it down to a filial debate between brother and sister, an Iranian agent and a banker’s wife separated by a murder.
Diana Son writes a witty background to the axis of evil, and hatred, as nuclear power fades into international terrorism. The whole evening becomes a terrifying resume of what we have become with our learning and our scientific progress: it’s a truly global warning.
Here I am again, less than 12 hours after leaving the Tricycle Theatre, hearing news that could just as easily have been part of what I’d seen earlier. I suspect there is no other theatre in the world using its stage to present an objective debate about the issues of our time and their historical perspective. This time, the bomb and its ‘Proliferation’ from 1940 to the early 90′s and its ‘Present Dangers’ – the last 10 years (and forward three).
These ten short plays, and thirteen verbatim interview extracts, take us from wartime Whitehall, where German and Austrian scientists in exile present a startling discovery to the UK government, to recent IAEA inspections in Iran. In between, we visit the 1945 Potsdam Conference, an Indian nuclear facility, post-independence Ukraine, the White House, Pyongyang and the UN.
For me, the highlights were Lee Blessing’s Seven Joys, set in a fictitious club of nuclear nations, and David Greig’s chilling yet funny The Letter of Last Resort, set in 2015 in Downing Street on the first day of our next PM. This latter play simply but brilliantly shows us the rationale (or not) for The Deterrent like a scene from Yes, Prime Minister (which it acknowledges).
Yet again, I learnt so much whilst (yes, it’s true!) being entertained. This is equal measure education, debate, drama and entertainment and if that isn’t a theatrical achievement, I don’t know what is. In two parts and just four hours stage time, Nicholas Kent’s compelling staging flows seamlessly on Polly Sullivan’s simple but effective set, with a superb video design from Douglas O’Connell.
Eleven excellent actors each play between two and five of the forty roles and enact the thirteen verbatim statements. Belinda Lang and Simon Chandler were superb in the Grieg play as were Daniel Rabin and Rick Warden, who played the exiled scientists in the two Zinnie Harris plays which frame the whole piece.
A suitably appropriate swan song for Nicholas Kent. I can think of no other person who has made theatre as relevant in modern times, taking plays about the history of Afghanistan into the Pentagon and about events in our own country into Parliament. Within months of the August 2011 riots, they were objectively and forensically examined on this very stage. From the man in Row G, sir, I salute you. - Gareth James
Film information line 020 7328 1900. Society of London Theatre member. The theatre has a cafe - La Brunelloise Traiteur - serving pre theatre snacks and meals from £2-£6.
Whatsonstage.com - Discount London theatre tickets, theatre news and reviews, Theatre videos, Theatre discussion, National Theatre Listings. Covering London's West End, all of Theatreland and all UK theatre. The best
for London Theatre Ticket Discounts.