The Vertical Hour

The Vertical Hour is a play by David Hare. The play addresses the relationship of characters with opposing views on the 2003 invasion of Iraq, and also explores psychological tension between public lives and private lives.[1] The play received its world premiere at the Music Box Theater on Broadway, on 30 November 2006, in a production directed by Sam Mendes. The premiere cast featured Bill Nighy, Julianne Moore in her Broadway debut, and Andrew Scott.[2][3] It closed on 11 March 2007, after a run of 23 previews and 117 performances.

The play received its UK premiere at the Royal Court Theatre on 17 January 2008 in a production directed by Jeremy Herrin.[4][5] The principal actors were Indira Varma, Anton Lesser and Tom Riley. It was the fastest selling new play in the Royal Court's history and was broadcast on BBC Radio Three on 25 May 2008.

In September 2014, The Vertical Hour will open at the Park Theatre, in a new production directed by BAFTA Winner Nigel Douglas. The show will be produced by Oliver Taheri Productions.

On 10 September 2014, The Vertical Hour will have its South African premiere at Theatre on the Bay, 1 Link Road, Camps Bay, Cape Town, directed by Fred Abrahamse and produced by Pieter Toerien.

Principal roles and original cast

Role Premiere cast, 30 November 2006
New York City, Music Box Theater
UK premiere cast, 17 January 2008
London, Royal Court Theatre
RSA premiere cast, 10 August 2014
Cape Town, Theatre on the Bay
Nadia Blye Julianne Moore Indira Varma Jackie Rens (Jacqueline Maré Rens)
Oliver Lucas Bill Nighy Anton Lesser Michael Richard
Philip Lucas Andrew Scott Tom Riley Richard Gau
Dennis Dutton Dan Bittner Joseph Kloska Jaco van Rensburg
Terri Scholes Rutina Wesley Wunmi Mosaku Sinakho Zo' Zokufa

Theme

Hare considers the work to be a companion piece to his play Stuff Happens, about the Iraq War, but on an intimate scale. In the private conversations of a war correspondent, who covered the conflict, and her boyfriend's father, Hare believes that he presents the theme of national responsibility for war with relevance equal to his epic piece depicting soldiers and statesmen preparing for invasion.[6]

Synopsis

Nadia Blye is a professor at Yale University, a former war correspondent during the 1990s Balkan conflicts, and a supporter of the 2003 invasion of Iraq. As the play begins, she is in conference with one of her students, Dennis Dutton, over the merits of one of his writing assignments. During the course of the conversation, Dennis reveals that he is infatuated with Nadia, even though he has a fiancée. Distressed, Nadia dismisses Dennis from her office.

Nadia and her English boyfriend, Philip Lucas, travel to Shropshire to visit Philip's father, Oliver, a physician, so that Nadia can meet Oliver for the first time. Philip tells Nadia that his father is a habitual womanizer and is opposed to the Iraq war. Oliver and Nadia debate the merits of the invasion of Iraq and of intervention by one country into the affairs of another country in general. Nadia justifies the invasion based on the earlier oppression of the Iraqi people, and her observations that the Western powers did nothing to alleviate the suffering of the Balkan peoples in the 1990s. In the play, her character is described as having visited US President George W. Bush to offer advice on foreign policy related to the Middle East and Iraq. She acknowledges that the aftermath of the invasion was undesirable, but that this did not negate the original rationale. Oliver counters that the US and UK invading forces had no plans for the reconstruction of Iraq and that the rationale for the invasion, purported weapons of mass destruction, was false and unjustified.

During the course of the discussion, the strained relationship between Oliver and Philip is revealed to Nadia. An unspoken attraction develops between Oliver and Nadia, of which Philip is suspicious. Philip clearly tells Nadia that his father is trying to seduce her, which leads to strain between Nadia and Philip. Nadia also learns of Oliver's "open marriage" and extramarital affairs, one of which led to the accidental death of one of Oliver's mistresses. This caused Oliver to give up his London practice and home, and to move to the country in isolation.

The play ends as Nadia is in conference with another student, Terri Scholes, criticising Terri's latest writing assignment for a class. Terri tells Nadia that she plans to leave Yale because her boyfriend has broken up with her. Nadia commiserates that she, too, has recently broken up with a boyfriend. She convinces Terri to wait a day before finalizing her decision to leave Yale, but reveals that she herself will be leaving Yale to return to being a war correspondent.

References

  1. Michael Billington (2006-12-01). "'A five-course meal after a diet of candyfloss' - Hare hits Manhattan". The Guardian. Retrieved 2008-02-02.
  2. Robert Simonson (2006-05-26). "Hare's The Vertical Hour, With Julianne Moore, to Play Music Box". Playbill Arts. Retrieved 2008-02-02.
  3. Ben Brantley (2006-12-01). "Battle Zones in Hare Country". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-02-02.
  4. Michael Billington (23 January 2008). "The Vertical Hour (Royal Court, London)". The Guardian. Retrieved 2008-02-02.
  5. Paul Taylor (24 January 2008). "The Vertical Hour (Royal Court, London)". The Independent. Retrieved 2008-02-02.
  6. Boon, Richard (2007). The Cambridge companion to David Hare. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. pp. 2–3. ISBN 978-0-521-85054-4.

External links

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