29 Nisan 2014 Salı

New play by Carl Djerassi, inventor of the pill, explores philosophers" sex lives

Carl Djerassi

The pill ‘was extremely crucial, but I’ve carried out considerably much more complicated, crucial things’ … Carl Djerassi. Photograph: Karen Ostertag




Theatre often can make grandiose claims about modifying the world. But it’s challenging to think of a playwright who can match Carl Djerassi for historical effect. Soon after all, this is the guy who invented the pill.





  1. Foreplay

  2. The King’s Head,

  3. London

  4. N1 1QN




  1. Starts 30 April

  2. Till 31 Could


  3. Box workplace:
    020 7478 0160

  4. Venue internet site





Today, aged 90, he loathes the concept of currently being defined by a 60-yr-previous achievement. “Why do you believe your editors were interested in me?” he asks. When I proffer the pill over the plays he’s written in the previous 15 many years, he huffs: “That, of program, irritates me. Any conversation usually starts with the pill.”


His accent is an Austrian purr with the softest Rs you’ll ever hear. His all-natural mode of speech is to lecture. “Of course, societally it was incredibly crucial, but scientifically, I have done a lot much more challenging, critical issues. The presumption that I sat close to between 28 and 90 performing nothing irritates me.”


In fact, Djerassi turned social scientist in his 50s, novelist in his 60s and, at 75, playwright. Reinvention has run via his lifestyle. He left Austria for America in 1939, aged 15. “An easy age,” he now says, “You happen to be still adaptable enough to turn into an American. You can disregard almost everything that took place earlier.”


He is written 11 plays, one of which, Foreplay, opens at the King’s Head theatre in Islington this week. The play brings philosophers Theodor Adorno and Hannah Arendt with each other in excess of a mystery surrounding Walter Benjamin. What, they want to know, was in the briefcase he carried more than the Pyrenees, shortly prior to he died?


“Every person assumed he was carrying something that he didn’t want to get misplaced,” says Djerassi. “My assumption was the reverse: that he took anything with him due to the fact he did not want it to get discovered.” Namely: explicit material. Porn.


Study in between the play’s lines and you’ll spot Djerassi’s resentment about reductive narratives. For all we attribute tips to men and women, the actuality isn’t as simple. Foreplay insists that tips do not arrive in isolation. It notes Adorno and Arendt’s roots in Benjamin’s function to display that concepts have ancestry, but also nods to unacknowledged influences as properly. The perform exhibits thinkers as sexual beings with their suggestions inspired by adore.


It’s a fascinating perform, but an outdated-fashioned one a wonderful go through, but challenging to picture it functioning onstage. Djerassi is unapologetic about that. “Ninety-nine per cent of playwrights will disagree, but plays are also really worth reading through,” he insists. “I consider of playwriting as a three-stage approach. One particular ought to initial publish it for the reader. Phrases actually count.”


While he is adapted the script for functionality, Djerassi sees his plays within a dialogical tradition, which utilizes imagined debate to make its level. It might be unfashionable, but once again Djerassi is unashamed. “I have didactic motives and, of program, numerous folks detest didacticism in theatre. There is nothing wrong with studying although becoming amused.”


Most of his plays are directly scientific. When playwrights use science – he cites Michael Frayn and his old friend Tom Stoppard – they typically do so as metaphor, not, as Djerassi intends, as a topic in its very own appropriate. Science-in-theatre, he calls it and the aim is to counter what he sees as science’s bad rep onstage. “Science and scientists just have not produced it in theatre. Both they are Frankensteins or Strangeloves, idiots savants or nerds, never ever regular individuals like myself.”


• Foreplay is at the King’s Head, Islington, until 31 May possibly




New play by Carl Djerassi, inventor of the pill, explores philosophers" sex lives

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