Synopses & Reviews
A collection of plays from Tricycle Theatre and leading contemporary dramatists, charting the political history of the nuclear bomb and its proliferation over the last seventy years. Includes plays by John Donnelly, Elena Gremina, Amit Gupta, Zinnie Harris, Ron Hutchinson, Lee Blessing, Ryan Craig, David Greig, Diana Son, and Colin Teevan.
Review
An entertaining, provoking dossier, with admirable nuance and real purpose” 4 stars
Time OutBold and political
a probing account of the history of nuclear weapons - and their future... a timely attempt to catalyse debate about a subject too often neglected” 4 stars Evening Standard
The Bomb
can only be reviewed as an event. And what an event. Only the Tricycle - the last bastion of powerful political theatre in the UK - could present a five-hour marathon on the development and deployment of the nuclear bomb. And only the Tricycle could make those five hours fly
an exercise in creating simple, entertaining and crucial polemical theatre.” The Stage
A characteristically ambitious and penetrating collection of short plays
there isnt a complete dud among them, and the best pieces are superb examples of powerful one-act drama
One leaves the theatre thrilled, chilled and deeply fearful about what the future may hold.” 4 stars The Telegraph
An astonishing achievement that puts the nuclear issue back at the centre of public debate
The Tricycle has once again started a debate that our politicians would prefer to suppress.” Guardian
A vivid, serious examination of one of the most pressing issues of our time.” Financial Times
Like a highly trained rapid response unit, Nicolas Kents Tricycle Theatre again proves itself adept at seizing the moment with its latest big event
the Tricycle once again powerfully dramatises the need to understand our history in order to understand ourselves.” Metro
Nothings funnier, or more frightening, than the concept of nations entitled to own nuclear weapons on the condition they dont detonate them.” Independent
One leaves the theatre thrilled, chilled and deeply fearful about what the future may hold.” Daily Telegraph
Synopsis
A collection of plays from leading contemporary dramatists, charting the political history of the nuclear bomb and its proliferation.
Synopsis
THE BOMB - A Partial History is a season of plays from leading contemporary dramatists, charting the political history of the Nuclear Bomb and its proliferation from 1940 to the present day.
FIRST BLAST (1940 - 1992) features plays by John Donnelly, Elena Gremina, Amit Gupta, Zinnie Harris & Ron Hutchinson. It is the first year of World War II, and in Whitehall two migr Jewish scientists are waiting for a meeting to get the British establishment to take their nuclear research seriously. The following plays then trace the history of the Labour party wrestling with the decision to build the Atomic Bomb, the Cuban missile crisis from a Russian perspective, China's war with India and the subsequent development of India's bomb, the break-up of the Soviet Union and the unilateral disarmament of Ukraine.
SECOND BLAST (1992 - 2012) features plays by Lee Blessing, Ryan Craig, David Greig, Zinnie Harris, Diana Son & Colin Teevan. 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.