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Longitude
(2002) |
| (10
Actors)* |
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| SYNOPSIS |
| In the early 18th
century the inability to find longitude led to such loss of life and
cargo that Parliament passed an act offering £20,000 to anyone
who solved the problem. Isaac Newton knew a clock would solve it but
did not believe such a clock could be invented. Scientists focused
on the lunar solution. |
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JOHN HARRISON, a carpenter and joiner from Lincolnshire,
taught himself to mend clocks. He invented a land clock that ran
accurately, and set himself the task of inventing a clock that could
run accurately at sea. He spent his life perfecting it and, together
with his son, fulfilled the tests required by Parliament.
For complex reasons the complete prize was never
awarded to him. The play traces a lifetime's conflict between uneducated
genius and the establishment. An epic play in a Hogarthian setting
calling for music - HARRISON was also a choirmaster. |
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| EXCERPT |
| And while my timekeeper is dismantled
and out of function your priest and professor the very very oh so
reverend Neville Maskelyne will seek a trial of the ridiculous lunar
method with its mad and cumbersome measurements between fixed stars
and a crazy moon. And you'll love that, all of you. Your little heads
will look up and gaze at the magnificence of the heavens and you'll
imagine God is speaking to you, telling you the way, and it won't
matter if there's a cloud or two or three or four you'll wait till
they're passed and waste time calculating when all you need is my
little piece of machinery. But no! Oh no! Too vulgar for you. What's
a little metal, a few springs, and tiny wheels compared to the stars?
Good Lord and little fishes, who is this upstart from up north with
his tick tocking cogs and balances? Oh, yes. I know only too well
why you want my timekeeper dismantled. |
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