Chimerica (play)

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Chimerica
Written by Lucy Kirkwood
Date premieredMay 20, 2013 (2013-05-20)
Original languageEnglish

Chimerica is a 2013 play by the British dramatist Lucy Kirkwood. It draws its title from the term Chimerica, referring to the predominance of China and America in modern geopolitics. The play premiered in London at the Almeida Theatre and was directed by Lyndsey Turner. Turner's production received several awards and was well-reviewed. A Channel 4 four-part drama of the same name based on the play was released in 2019. [1]

Contents

Development

Playwright Lucy Kirkwood was commissioned to write the play that would become Chimerica in 2006, seven years before it eventually premiered. [2] [3]

The title of the play comes from the portmanteau Chimerica, coined by Niall Ferguson and Moritz Schularick, referring to the significance of the sociopolitical relationship between China and America, especially in the global economy. [4] Kirkwood has also cited the similarity in sound between 'Chimerica' and the word 'chimera' as a reason for the title. [2]

Synopsis

Chimerica follows photojournalist Joe Schofield, who photographed the unidentified Tank Man during the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests and massacre. Twenty years later, Chinese dissident and ESL teacher Zhang Lin, who was present during the 1989 pro-democracy protests and subsequent massacre, assists Joe in his quest to find Tank Man. Zhang Lin's fiancee, Liuli, died in the protests and flashback scenes between Liuli and Zhang Lin appear throughout the play. Joe's journalist colleagues recommend that Joe not pursue the Tank Man. After Joe returns to America, where Lin suggests the Tank Man is living, Zhang Lin is tortured by the Chinese authorities. Joe develops a relationship with Englishwoman, Tessa, who is profiling the Chinese population so that her employer can have an advantage in China. [5] At the end of the play, it is revealed that Zhang Lin was the Tank Man.

Characters

Production history

Premiere

Chimerica premiered at the Almeida Theatre, London from 20 May 2013 to 6 July 2013, in a production co-produced with Headlong [7] before transferring to the Harold Pinter Theatre. [8] The production was directed by Lyndsey Turner with stage design by Es Devlin. [9]

Premiere cast

Actor [10] Character(s) [10]
Claudie Blakley Tessa Kendrick
Stephen Campbell Moore Joe Schofield
Elizabeth ChanLiuli/Jennifer
Vera Chok / Wendy KwehMichelle/Mary Chang/Deng
Karl Collins David Barker/Peter Rourke/Paul Kramer/Officer Hyte
Trevor Cooper Frank/Herb/Drug Dealer
Nancy CraneDoreen/Maria Dubiecki/Judy
Sean Gilder Mel Stanwick
Sarah LamFeng Meihui/Ming Xiaoli
Andrew LeungYoung Zhang Lin/Benny
David K S TseZhang Wei/Wang Pengsi
Benedict Wong Zhang Lin
Rosie ArmstrongEnsemble/Understudy for Tessa Kendrick, Doreen, Maria Dubiecki, Judy
Tina ChiangEnsemble/Understudy for Liuli, Jennifer, Michelle, Mary Chang, Deng, Feng Meihui, Ming Xiaoli
Christopher HollinsheadEnsemble/Understudy for Joe Schofield
Math SamsEnsemble/Understudy for David Barker, Peter Rourke, Paul Kramer, Officer Hyte, Frank, Herb, Drug Dealer, Mel Stanwick
Kevin ShenEnsemble/Understudy for Zhang Lin, Young Zhang Lin, Benny, Zhang Wei, Wang Pengsi

Subsequent productions

In September 2015, Chimerica was performed for the first time in the United States. The production was directed by David Muse at Studio Theatre in Washington, D.C., Rob Yang played Zhang Lin opposite Ron Menzel's Joe Schofield. [11] [12]

Chimerica made its Canadian premiere at the Royal Manitoba Theatre Centre in 2016. The production was directed by Chris Abraham and starred Evan Buliung as Joe and Paul Sun-Hyung Lee as Zhang Lin. [13] Filmmaker Deco Dawson provided video which was projected during the performance. [14] This production was co-produced by the Royal Manitoba Theatre Centre and by Toronto's Canadian Stage. After playing in Winnipeg from February till mid-March, the production travelled to Toronto and played from the end of March to mid-April. [15]

Later in 2016, Chimerica played in Chicago at TimeLine Theatre under the direction of Nick Bowling. [16]

Chimerica premiered in Australia in March 2017. Kip Williams directed the Sydney Theatre Company production at the Roslyn Packer Theatre. The production starred Mark Leonard Winter as Joe and Jason Chong as Zhang Lin among the cast of 32 actors. [17]

In February and March 2022, the Crane Creations Theatre Company led a play reading of Chimerica on its Play Date. This play reading is meant to spread awareness and increase appreciation of playwrights and playwriting from around the world and to global audiences.

A French adaptation of Chimerica premiered in Montreal in January 2024 at the Jean-Duceppe Theatre of Place des Arts. [18]

Adaptations

In 2019, Channel 4 released a four-part drama called Chimerica inspired by the play. The adaptation was penned by Lucy Kirkwood who made several changes from the original script including changing the setting from 2012 to 2016. The main character in the series is called Lee Berger and is played by Alessandro Nivola. [19]

Reception

The play as a whole has been criticized for its ambitious runtime of over three hours. [16] [20] [21]

The Almeida production was described in one review [22] as "fluent and seductive", with a "filmic quality", with the multiple set changes well-handled. The premiere was well received and garnered many awards.

In September 2019, The Guardian writers listed it as the 10th best theatre show since 2000. [23]

Awards

YearAwardCategoryResultNotesRef.
2013 Evening Standard Awards Best PlayWon [24]
2014 Olivier Awards Best New Play Won [25] [26]
Best Director Wonfor Lyndsey Turner
Best Lighting Design Wonfor Tim Lutkin and Finn Ross
Best Sound Design Wonfor Carolyn Downing
Best Set Design Wonfor Es Devlin
Susan Smith Blackburn Prize Wonfor Lucy Kirkwood [27]

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tank Man</span> Anonymous Tiananmen Square protester

The Tank Man is the nickname given to an unidentified individual, presumed to be a Chinese man, who stood in front of a column of Type 59 tanks leaving Tiananmen Square in Beijing on June 5, 1989, the day after the government of China had massacred hundreds of protesters. As the lead tank maneuvered to pass by the man, he repeatedly shifted his position in order to obstruct the tank's attempted path around him, and forced the tanks to halt to avoid running him over. The incident was filmed and shared to a worldwide audience. Internationally, it is considered one of the most iconic images of all time. Inside China, the image and the accompanying events are subject to censorship.

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References

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  2. 1 2 Bowling, Nick (11 May 2016). "Interview with Lucy Kirkwood". TimeLine Theatre. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
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  8. "Chimerica, Harold Pinter Theatre". Ambassador Theatre Group. Retrieved 7 October 2013.
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  14. King, Randall (24 February 2016). "Director deals with lots of moving parts in complicated, ambitious work". Winnipeg Free Press. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
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  25. Wyatt, Daisy (13 April 2014). "Oliviers 2014 winners list in full: Chimerica and The Book of Mormon were the big winners on Sunday night". The Independent. Retrieved 26 April 2020.
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