A Number (NHB Modern Plays)
Caryl Churchill
- 64 páginas
- English
- ePUB (apto para móviles)
- Disponible en iOS y Android
A Number (NHB Modern Plays)
Caryl Churchill
Información del libro
A fascinating meditation on human cloning, personal identity and the conflicting claims of nature and nurture.
Winner of the Evening Standard Award for Best Play of 2002. A Number was first staged at the Royal Court Theatre, 2002, starring Michael Gambon & Daniel Craig.
' A Number confirms Churchill's status as the first dramatist of the 21st century... The questions this brilliant, harrowing play asks are almost unanswerable, which is why they must be asked' - Sunday Times
'Caryl Churchill's magnificent new play only lasts an hour but contains more drama, and more ideas, than most writers manage in a dozen full-length works. Part psychological thriller, part topical scientific speculation, and part analysis of the relationship between fathers and their sons, it combines elegant structural simplicity with an astonishing intellectual and emotional depth...What a tremendous play this is, moving thought-provoking and dramatically thrilling' - Daily Telegraph
'Rarely in my theatre-going experience has a new play conveyed such a disturbing or enthralling impression of domestic weirdness that some families may endure in a not entirely hypothetical future... It's an astonishing event' - Evening Standard
Preguntas frecuentes
Información
B2 | A number |
SALTER | you mean |
B2 | a number of them, of us, a considerable |
SALTER | say |
B2 | ten, twenty |
SALTER | didn’t you ask? |
B2 | I got the impression |
SALTER | why didn’t you ask? |
B2 | I didn’t think of asking. |
SALTER | I can’t think why not, it seems to me it would be the first thing you’d want to know, how far has this thing gone, how many of these things are there? |
B2 | Good, so if it ever happens to you |
SALTER | no you’re right |
B2 | no it was stupid, it was shock, I’d known for a week before I went to the hospital but it was still |
SALTER | it is, I am, the shocking thing is that there are these, not how many but at all |
B2 | even one |
SALTER | exactly, even one, a twin would be a shock |
B2 | a twin would be a surprise but a number |
SALTER | a number any number is a shock. |
B2 | You said things, these things |
SALTER | I said? |
B2 | you called them things. I think we’ll find they’re people. |
SALTER | Yes of course they are, they are of course. |
B2 | Because I’m one. |
SALTER | No. |
B2 | Yes. Why not? Yes. |
SALTER | Because they’re copies |
B2 | copies? they’re not |
SALTER | copies of you which some mad scientist has illegally |
B2 | how do you know that? |
SALTER | I don’t but |
B2 | what if someone else is the one, the first one, the real one and I’m |
SALTER | no because |
B2 | not that I’m not real which is why I’m saying they’re not things, don’t call them |
SALTER | just wait, because I’m your father. |
B2 | You know that? |
SALTER | Of course. |
B2 | It was all a normal, everything, birth |
SALTER | you think I wouldn’t know if I wasn’t your father? |
B2 | Yes of course I was just for a moment there, but they are all still people like twins are all, quins are all |
SALTER | yes I’m sorry |
B2 | we just happen to have identical be identical identical genetic |
SALTER | sorry I said things, I didn’t mean anything by that, it just |
B2 | no forget it, it’s nothing, it’s |
SALTER | because of course for me you’re the |
B2 | yes I know what you meant, I just, because of course I want them to be things, I do think they’re things, I don’t think they’re, of course I do think they’re them just as much as... |