Skylight Theatre
For highly animated American expat Georgie Burns, meeting nondescript local butcher Alex Priest in a London train station sparks an instant connection, at least on her part. For one thing, never before has she met a quiet bluecollar Englishman able to refer to a conversation with her as something “starting to get cyclical.” This is the beginning of a gloriously mismatched love affair that is central—no, everything—in Simon Stephens’ remarkable play Heisenberg, now packin’ ‘em in at the Skylight under the astonishing directorial hand of Cameron Watson.
The elephant in the room here is Georgie is 42 and Alex is 33 years her senior. The eccentric, motor-mouthed Georgie (Juls Hoover) pursues the mild-mannered and highly suspicious Alex (Paul Eiding) relentlessly, stalking London butcher shops before finding and showing up at his and promising the unnerved guy that she intends to buy an “amazing amount of meat.”
The relationship eventually develops into a torrid though improbable love affair and, in the intimate Skylight, audience members squirm a tad when the pair shares their first passionate kiss—of course, not me, considering I’m the December in my own long and successful May-December relationship. It all seemed quite familiar to me.
Stephens has created a highly unique play from a rather predictable situation, delicately peeling away the layers of the recently widowed Georgie’s ditsy dysfunctionality and Alex’ intense emptiness and disappointment with life as their socially inconceivable relationship intensifies. As he relaxes his guard and begins to trust Georgie, he recognizes she’s a completely unexpected boon to his world while for her, what may have been something she initiated at least partially for mercenary reasons, their bond eventually makes her mourn the fragility of current times, hanging onto our rapidly spinning planet with both fists.
“It’s really brief, life,” she tells Alex, “and really quite unfair.”
Eiding is arrestingly and confidently simple as the lonely butcher, his physicality subtly but perceptibly becoming less and less obstructed by both gravity and societal placement as his love for Georgie grows. Even the first time Alex hops youthfully into bed next to her, suddenly resembling a college freshman getting lucky at a frat party, he gets a well-deserved reaction from Heisenberg’s supportive audience. Eiding contributes one of the most remarkable and memorable performances of the year without a second of contrivance in a role that could be a huge gaping trap for any actor.
And speaking of huge traps, Hoover does a masterful job trying to avoid all the ones written into Stephens’ Georgie—and she almost succeeds. I did feel at the top of the show, even though her character is written as such a completely ditzy weirdo, her work still felt as though she was simply working too hard and not getting far enough into the softer underbelly of Georgie’s damaged soul. Also, there is an air of put-togetherness about Hoover that would be hard to overcome in any role, I suspect, where I think Georgie must reflect a kind of diner-waitress hardness and raw sexuality the actor misses.
Mary-Louise Parker in the LA premiere of Heisenberg at the Taper some seven years ago suffered from the same issues but far, far more so—not to mention Parker adopted such a strange choice of quirky vocal gymnastics that I thought for awhile the character was hearing impaired.
Still, thankfully in the last half of Hoover’s performance, she settles nicely into the role as Georgie begins to find security in her new relationship. From then on, I fell into her performance wholeheartedly and believed her every choice.
Interestingly, Heisenberg worked so much better at the 99-seat Skylight than it did at the Taper, mostly due to Watson’s exceptionally fluid, even dreamlike staging, as well as Tesshi Nakagawa’s starkly simple set, Ken Booth’s moody lighting, and Jeff Gardner’s always evocative sound design. The 700-seat Taper production tried desperately to duplicate its original design in New York at the intimate three-sided Manhattan Theatre Club, also adding audience members onstage on three sides—a decision that proved unwieldy and distracting.
Simply, Watson’s riveting and innovative reinvention of a beautifully gossamer play proves here to be an amazing achievement.
The title of the play itself is crafty and thought-provoking, insisting we work to unearth what it means at its core, especially since the name Werner Heisenberg never once comes up. Heisenberg’s “uncertainty principle,” developed in the 1920s at Niels Bohr’s institute in Copenhagen, is foundational in the field of modern quantum physics.
“One may say,” he theorized, “that in a state of science where fundamental concepts have to be changed, tradition is both the condition for progress and a hindrance. Hence, it usually takes a long time before the new concepts are generally accepted.”
The relationship between Georgie and Alex is splendidly untraditional and the fact that we, the audience, collectively become accepting of it and even root for the pair to succeed, is a testament to Stephens’ brilliance.
Interestingly, my friend Penny Stallings, a staunch lifelong feminist who joined me originally for opening night at the Taper in 2017, thought it would be fascinating to see Heisenberg cast in the opposite configuration—that is, featuring an older woman and a younger male as Georgie—and Cam Watson told me after this performance that last year it was performed in a small London theatre with two women as the lovers.
I, on the other hand, as half of a surprisingly unexpected 13-year relationship with an amazing guy 42 years my junior also wondered how it would play if Georgie was played by a male, especially if the reticent butcher had never before been part of a gay relationship.
What these three ideas say for Heisenberg and the writing of Simon Stephens (Olivier and Tony Award winner for The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time and Olivier Best New Play recipient for On the Shore of the Wide World) is that his chameleon-strong grasp of human nature and the way our world turns these days, despite the unconscionable temporary troglodyte-populated setback of our American political system, elevates him as one of our most important contemporary wordsmiths of our time.