

A Most Secret War
Kevin Patterson
Derek Jacobi took London and Broadway by storm in this exceptional biographical drama about a man who broke too many codes: the eccentric genius Alan Turing who played a major role in winning the World War II; he broke the complex German code called Enigma, enabling allied forces to foresee German manoeuvres.
Since his work was classified top secret for years after the war, no one knew how much was owed to him when he was put on trial for breaking another code the taboo against homosexuality.
Turing, who was also the first to conceive of computers, was convicted of the criminal act of homosexuality and sentenced to undergo hormone treatments which left him physically and mentally debilitated.
He died a suicide, forgotten and alone.
This play is about who he was, what happened to him and why.
Breaking the Code Biografía de Alan Turing, 1996 Sub ESP
Breaking the Code is a British play written by Hugh Whitemore and published by Samuel French (1989).
Digital editions available on Amazon Kindle .
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