

In the Matter of J. Robert Oppenheimer
Heinar Kipphardt
What readers are saying
Readers appreciate the captivating execution of the play and its originality. The actor's commitment during a power outage left a strong impression, highlighting the show's immersive quality.
Drama / Cast: 4m., 3w.
(with doubling.
May be expanded to 7 or more m., 5w.) "Do I dare disturb the universe?" J. Robert Oppenheimer's rise and fall erupt in this kaleidoscopic play exploring questions of faith, conscience, and the consequences of the never-ending pursuit of knowledge.
Act One: Math.
The fevered wartime drive to build the first nuclear weapon, by a collection of previously academic theoretical physicists, many of them Jews fleeing Hitler's Germany.
Success turns to horror when "the Gadget" is dropped, first on Hiroshima, then Nagasaki.
Act Two: Aftermath.
Oppenheimer confronts his conscience; Russia turns from ally to enemy.
The Red scare is in full swing as we shift to the courtroom.
Oppenheimer's wife, Kitty, drinks; J. Edger Hoover does the dance of the seven veils; and the Father of the Atomic Bomb has his security clearance revoked, cast out of the world he helped create.
In a flash that is the end of his life, J. Robert Oppenheimer paces the desert of the Trinity Test Site, wrestling with his memories and one scary, sexy, unpredictable demon: Lilith, Hebrew mythology's first woman, cast out of Eden for refusing to behave.
Hissing in his ear, she goads him to admit what he refuses to acknowledge: an anger that mirrors her own.
"Oppie" is haunted by actions, decisions, and a trinity of women—mother, wife Kitty, and lover, Jean Tatlock.
Her suicide is never far from his mind; her Communist ties are never far from the government's.
The Love Song of J. Robert Oppenheimer is a play written by Carson Kreitzer and published by Dramatic Publishing (2006).
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