A review by storytimed
Copenhagen by Michael Frayn

5.0

I read it and I was like, holy shit, I forgot what it was like to read something Good for once
It's a play based on an actual historical event that happened during World War II

So basically the background is that in the 1920s-1930s, Niels Bohr mentored Werner Heisenberg and formed much of the foundation of modern physics (see: Heisenberg's uncertainty principle) 

They continued to work on physics and specifically nuclear physics up until the 40s, which. Heisenberg was German and working for the Nazis. Niels Bohr was Danish and half-Jewish

And in 1941, during the height of the war, Heisenberg went to visit Bohr in Copenhagen (title of the play).
AND THE INTERESTING THING IS, both of them (years on) could not agree on what happened during this visit

Bohr maintained that Heisenberg was trying to recruit him for the Nazis (how dare he) and Heisenberg sort of danced around and suggested that maybe he was warning Bohr that the Nazis were trying to develop an atom bomb

The play only has three characters: Heisenberg, Bohr, and Margerethe, Bohr's wife, and it's about the three of them arguing and drafting different explanations and ideas about what might have happened during the visit, using their uncertain memories

I really loved the way Frayn uses reoccurring motifs & worked physics into the text

Like, he uses Heisenberg's uncertainty principle (the impossibility of both knowing where an atom is and how fast it is traveling) as a metaphor for the limits of self-knowledge (the impossibility of both knowing why you're doing something and doing it at the same time)

And just like............ the way they constantly summon up new drafts of their 1941 encounter the same way they continually try to approach a better understanding of physics

Like, at one v important point Margerethe speaks up to say, hey, what the fuck! You keep talking about this like glorious partnership of intellectual collaboration but really you always did your best work while you were apart!

Very good........ I would like to see this performed one day

Also I learned about Niels Bohr's instrumental role of the rescue of like 90% of Jewish Danish people during WWII