behind. Because there were five roles in the play, the actors went through the doors every now and then and changed with the help of the stage manager
on another person’s clothes.
topic.
The play will be seen in three versions, which are becoming more and more chaotic.
What actor would agree to that?” Frayn, who is visiting Helsinki, asks.
Hinges and sardines – have been presented and are presented all over the world. The popularity of the farce is not surprising, but it is rare
is to create a play about quantum mechanics and atoms, which is constantly sold out at the Helsinki City Theatre, for example.
after reading Thomas Powers ‘ book Heisenberg’s War: The Secret History of the German Bomb, in which Powers tries to figure out why Germany didn’t get the war
nuclear weapons.
but calculated the U235 isotope of uranium needed for the explosion completely wrong. “Although the evidence is contradictory, I
I don’t think he would have been able to make an atomic bomb,” Michael Frayn says.
war.
nuclear weapons would be manufactured elsewhere than in Germany,” Frayn says.
war with the help of nuclear weapons. The letter gives a more pro-Nazi image of Heisenberg.
made Bohr’s attitude towards Heisenberg a little angrier. Now he only remembers the details of the meeting when Heisenberg
reminds me of them.”
Spies (Spies).
to his astonishment, the painting hanging in his neighbors’ homes to the missing Brueghel.
The writer was in the famous Brueghel room of the Museum of Art History in Vienna. Not for the first time, but for the first time
he read a plaque on the walls: Hunters in the Snow (1565) is one of Brueghel’s six works depicting the seasons
series, one of which is missing.
on the wall, protected by the blissful ignorance of the owners.”
The residents of old country manors need money, for example, for the studies of their descendants and invite an expert to assess
paintings on the walls for centuries. “They often turn out to be modest. But then there are cases where an expert
is already leaving and sees some irreplaceable work on the wall when he goes to the bathroom.”
hide the information and try to buy the painting secretly?
You have to remember that brokers are also businessmen.”
“Our perception is never pure, but it is regulated by presuppositions from different sides.”
The mother of the neighbor’s son is a German spy. The boy finds plenty of evidence for this. Of course, an adult reader will not
faith, but easily identifies with the boys’ thoughts.
almost impossible. The character can tell us how he feels, but we still have to decide whether we believe him
or not. This is what Copenhagen is largely based on: does the viewer believe Heisenberg or not?”
from the head. In a play, this is impossible.
A play made in Cambridge that flopped badly. “In retaliation, I wrote columns in the Guardian for years slandering theatre
and the Observer.”
In the 1970s. Frayn refuses to give details about it, but because she suspects that no one wants to perform the play,
It will undoubtedly be a success.