In the London theatre, unlike New York, there is no “season”: a hot ticket is as likely to open in July as November. And so it is that, on a gorgeous English August day (53° and drizzling), while Broadway is slumbering out in the Hamptons, le tout londres is packed into the National Theatre for The Coast of Utopia, the new trilogy by Tom Stoppard: three plays, each over three hours, played with intermissions in a twelve-hour marathon, an evening out that takes up all the afternoon and much of the morning too, and offers little more physical discomfort than, say, flying coach to New Zealand. The question on the theatergoing class’s lips is: Why would Sir Tom do this to us?
I suspect the answer is: Because he can. When he wrote his first hit back in the Sixties, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, Stoppard was admirably straightforward. Asked by someone, “What’s it about?,” he replied, &ldquo ...
Mark Steyn’s most recent book is America Alone: The End of the World As We Know It (Regnery)
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This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 21 September 2002, on page 46
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