Sunday, 30 August 2009

family life

There are more of us than there is trouble.

Bobby Kennedy

just doing what cary grant did

If, as predicted, direct action over coal-fired power stations and airport expansion increases (and the number of arrests rise), there will be more and more effort on the part of defendants to use the defence of 'necessity'. That is, the defendant's conduct was necessary to prevent a greater harm taking place.

The defence of necessity is not admissible in English law but it is in American law. What was so interesting about the cases of the Kingsnorth Six and the Drax 29 was the degree to which the judges did or did not allow the defendants to explain their motivation.

The Wiki entry on necessity uses the example of the drunk driver who had to escape from a kidnap - just what Cary Grant has to do early on in North By Northwest. Half a pint of bourbon is poured down his throat, and then he himself is poured into a car, and the car heads towards the edge of a cliff.

Cary Grant could justifiably claim that he had no reasonable alternative, he ceased to break the law as soon as the danger had passed, and that he did not himself create the danger that he sought to avoid.

time for anybody

'In Ireland,' says Peter Sheridan, director of the stage version of The Shawshank Redemption, 'anybody who was anybody in the 20th century spent time in jail ... Being in prison for us isn’t a negative thing.'

smoking them out

If every writer who smoked and drank pulled out of a literary festival, you wouldn’t be left with much of a festival.

Saturday, 30 May 2009

what's going on

'I could blah on forever about what’s going on in the book technically, but am unable to say anything intelligent about what the book means.' Geoff Dyer

Saturday, 23 May 2009

three in a fortnight

Three plays with strong environmental themes have opened in London in the last two weeks.

My Guardian theatre blog on the 'Green shoots of climate-change theatre' appears here.

Sunday, 17 May 2009

backstage slides

Slideshow version of my month behind-the-scenes at the National Theatre is here. Pics by Brian Harris.

Saturday, 9 May 2009

where the ice goes

If there's one line I had to choose from The Contingency Plan, Steve Waters’s terrific new double-bill of plays about climate change, now on at the Bush Theatre in London, it's the moment when Will Paxton (Geoffrey Streatfeild), a young glaciologist, explains the concept of displacement to the new Tory minister for climate change. Having spelled out that ice is 'basically parked water', Will warily predicts that the enormous West Antarctic Ice Sheet may well melt (much like the smaller Larsen B ice shelf).

'But this is thousands of miles from us,' chuckles the smooth Old Etonian minister (David Bark-Jones), whose schoolfriend, David Cameron, has become prime minister. Will replies with patience, 'If you pour water in the bath, it doesn't stay under the tap.'


My piece on 'Finally, A Good Play about Climate Change' appears here.

Monday, 27 April 2009

cover to cover

I argue here that the IPCC's 2001 Assessment has done for the 21st century what Darwin's Origin of Species did for the 19th: changed the way we think about the world.

William Shaw blogs that artist Amy Balkin is recruiting other artists to help her read out loud the IPCC's 2007 report. The event will take place at Futuresonic in Manchester over three days in May. There will be 72 slots of 20-minutes each.

Tuesday, 14 April 2009

cold shoulder

Spin doctors are like the daemons in Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials - not only do they sit loyally on their master's shoulder, they also reveal the character of the one they serve.

Thursday, 9 April 2009

definite article

Spain is moving to grant basic legal rights to apes. American law schools are offering courses on animal rights. In California it will be illegal to keep a calf, pregnant hog or egg-laying hen in a pen or cage in which the animal can't stretch or turn round.

In the New York Times, Nicholas Kristof argues that these attitudinal shifts stem from the 'deep intellectual ferment' that began with one article by Peter Singer that was published in 1973 in the New York Review of Books.

Tuesday, 7 April 2009

liberal tease

'He teases away with Socratic guile at the things that underpin the lifestyles of middle-class liberals.'

My preview of the Wallace Shawn season at the Royal Court.

(More Wallace Shawn: he wants Naomi Klein's audience here; he's unlike David Mamet here; he sums up enterprise of theatre here.)

Friday, 3 April 2009

take your pick

Simon Singh says you can be intelligent and deny climate change and you can be honourable and deny climate change, but you cannot be both.