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Tom Stoppard’s “Jumpers” is a Witty, Surreal Riff on God and Morality
Murder, adultery and a distraught actress are pieces of this rowdy
intellectual puzzle
By Lucy Komisar
Tom Stoppard’s acrobatic metaphor about an inquiry into
God and morality has the audience jumping through hoops, tripping over puns
and falling over themselves in attentive laughter. Needless to say, this is
the most intellectually stimulating production on Broadway.
As usual for Stoppard, it's enormously clever and witty
-- surreal, even -- and brilliantly staged by David Leveaux so that it
resembles a circus of the mind, challenging the viewer to keep up.
The play is a riff on the questions of “Does God exist”
and, related, “Is what is good and moral intrinsic and unchanging, or
culturally relative.” Come prepared to listen carefully to lines delivered
with great panache by Simon Russell Beale, one of the best British stage
actors. Even the throw-away lines grab your attention. Consider “the late
Lord Russell who, though, was punctual.”
“Jumpers” was first performed at the Old Vic Theatre,
London, in 1972, in a production directed by Peter Wood and starring Diana
Rigg and Michael Hordern. It’s lost none of its bite or relevance.
George Moore (Beale), a petulant, pixiesh professor of
philosophy, is attempting to write a speech about moral absolutes and the
existence of God. A professorship of divinity is the prize. But his is not
the trendy side of the argument. “When,” he wonders, “did the onus of proof
moved from atheist to believer?”
Is there “good,” or is everything relative? Is there
intuition of good? Well, clearly not from the establishment. The
self-important, breezily cynical university vice chancellor, Archie (Nick
Henson) – George’s opponent in the argument -- is nattily dressed in a black
and white striped double-breasted suit that conjures up a 30s Hollywood
gangster. He’s got an ethic to match.
Philosophy is represented by a team of acrobats,
logical positivists, in yellow warm-upsm who form pyramids that collapse on
cue. The metaphor of acrobats is opportune: one feels in the middle of an
intellectual three-ring circus.
Moore is challenged on the moral absolutes part of his
life equation by a young blonde mentally-scattered wife Dotty (Essie Davis),
an erstwhile musical comedy star whose consultations -- more physical than
mental -- occur with her psychiatrist lover (Archie) in a mirrored bedroom,
under glittering globes.
Dotty has lost her grip because of the shock at seeing
(on TV), a moon-landing astronaut let slip a fellow into the ether in order
to save himself. As Wittgenstein is borrowed, “He’s dead. It’s very sad, but
it’s not as if the alternative were immortality.” This destroys her sense of
the world’s morality, and with that, her own equilibrium.
As befits an inquiry into the moral center of the
world, the backdrop and ceiling also glitter with stars, and Dotty at one
point swings on a crescent moon. (The audience gets into the mood as they
enter the theater to the sounds of a swinging “Fly Me to the Moon.”)
Though she’s portrayed, under Leveaux’s direction, as a
bit of a bimbo, Dotty makes some prescient comments, including a commentary
about the need to definite democracy by more than voting. Like, who counts
the ballots?, ie. who runs the show? Essie Davis, who exudes little-girl
charm, makes her appear as something of an idiot savant.
Oh, did I mention the dead body in her closet? One of
the acrobats. At a rowdy party that has George calling the police to
complain about the noise, someone shot that logical positivist right out
from under the pyramid.
And there’s more tragedy to come, in the form of the
disappearance of Thumper, the rabbit, and an unfortunately underfoot
tortoise. Neither the rabbit nor the tortoise wins the race, as it were.
George, alas, is a well-meaning bumbler. But Stoppard and Leveaux are not.
“Jumpers.” Written by Tom Stoppard. Directed by David
Leveaux. Starring Simon Russell Beale, Essie Davis, Nicky Henson, Eliza
Lumley, John Rogan, Nicholas Woodeson.
New York: Brooks Atkinson Theatre, 256 West 47 St.
Tues-Sat 8, Wed & Sat 2, Sun 3. Running time 2:30. $60-$95. 212-307-4100.
http://www.ntny.org.
Images by Hugo Glendinning
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