Heisenberg
Opening Night: October 13, 2016
Closing: December 11, 2016
Theater: Samuel J. Friedman Theatre
Amidst the bustle of a crowded London train station, Clare spots Alex, a much older man, and plants a kiss on his neck. This electric encounter thrusts these two strangers into a life-changing game.
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Linda
Winer
October 13, 2016
Last year, Mary-Louise Parker and Denis Arndt sparked enchanting, offbeat brilliance in Manhattan Theatre Club’s brief Off-Broadway run of “Heisenberg,” the 80-minute maybe-love story that the company commissioned from British playwright Simon Stephens.
READ THE REVIEWOctober 13, 2016
Is “Heisenberg” really an appropriate title for Simon Stephens’ pensive two-character romance, considering that it has nothing to do with the famed physicist, quantum mechanics or anyone else by the name of Heisenberg?
READ THE REVIEWOctober 13, 2016
Though the play’s name is that of a theoretical physicist, chemistry — to be pronounced with a sizzling “s” — is the science that first comes to mind as you watch the splendid Broadway debut of Simon Stephens’s “Heisenberg,” which opened on Thursday night at the Samuel J. Friedman Theater
READ THE REVIEWOctober 13, 2016
“Do you find me exhausting but captivating?” asks Georgie in Simon Stephens’s sweet, surprising Heisenberg. Since she is played by Mary-Louise Parker, at full quirky tilt, the answer is a resounding yes on both counts. The object of Georgie’s initially unwelcome affection is Alex (a lovely, understated Denis Arndt), a stranger more than 30 years her senior, whose neck she kisses in a London train station. It is hard to discern her motives, because she surrounds herself in a hurricane of self-conscious verbiage that alternates between brutal honesty and pathological lies. But if she’s crazy, she’s also a fox, and Alex—an introverted butcher and lifelong bachelor—can’t resist her for long.
READ THE REVIEWBreanne L.
Heldman
October 13, 2016
No, Broadway’s Heisenberg isn’t some sort of stage retelling of Breaking Bad, or even a biographical tale of famed German theoretical physicist Werner Heisenberg. Instead, it’s a two-person study of what happens when constant movement collides with stillness, when quiet meets non-stop noise, and humor connects with sadness.
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