THE PRIVATE LIFE OF ALBERT EINSTEIN IS BROUGHT ON STAGE AT RIVERSIDE THEATRES
"Imagination is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world."
– Albert Einstein
Venue: Riverside Theatres
Address: Corner of Church and Market St, Parramatta
Date: Wednesday 10th May – Saturday 13th May, 2023
Time: Wednesday 8pm (Preview), Thursday 8pm (Opening Night), Friday 8pm, Saturday 2:30pm & 8pm
Ticket: $43-$49
Buy / Ticket: https://riversideparramatta.com.au/show/relativity/
Web: https://riversideparramatta.com.au/show/relativity/
EMail: boxoffice_riverside@cityofparramatta.nsw.gov.au
Call: 02 8839 3399
Address: Corner of Church and Market St, Parramatta
Date: Wednesday 10th May – Saturday 13th May, 2023
Time: Wednesday 8pm (Preview), Thursday 8pm (Opening Night), Friday 8pm, Saturday 2:30pm & 8pm
Ticket: $43-$49
Buy / Ticket: https://riversideparramatta.com.au/show/relativity/
Web: https://riversideparramatta.com.au/show/relativity/
EMail: boxoffice_riverside@cityofparramatta.nsw.gov.au
Call: 02 8839 3399
Riverside Theatres is thrilled to announce that Joining the Dots Theatre Co. will be bringing their hugely popular 2022 production, Relativity to Parramatta from 10th to 13th May.
These days Albert Einstein is as famous for his quotable quotes and his flagrant disregard for combs as he is for his outstanding contribution to physics. But what do we actually know of the man under the white hair? Does the private life of such a publicly acknowledged genius matter? Relativity by Mark St Germain asks the question: to be a great man, does one first need to be a good man?
This phenomenal play will once again be directed by Johann Walraven and stars.
Nicholas Papademetriou (Freud's Last Session, Clock and Spiel Productions), Nisrine Amine (Lady Tabouli, Griffin Theatre Co) and Alison Chambers (Babette's Feast, Joining the Dots Theatre Co).
St Germain is known for plays that place historical figures into imagined circumstances (such as Freud’s Last Session). The truth is that in 1902 Albert and Mileva Einstein had a daughter but after 1904, the child was never seen or spoken of again. The play opens in 1942 with a journalist coming to interview Einstein but is she more interested in the public theories or the very private man? Relativity has St Germain’s winning trademark combination of intelligence, wit and heart.
These days Albert Einstein is as famous for his quotable quotes and his flagrant disregard for combs as he is for his outstanding contribution to physics. But what do we actually know of the man under the white hair? Does the private life of such a publicly acknowledged genius matter? Relativity by Mark St Germain asks the question: to be a great man, does one first need to be a good man?
This phenomenal play will once again be directed by Johann Walraven and stars.
Nicholas Papademetriou (Freud's Last Session, Clock and Spiel Productions), Nisrine Amine (Lady Tabouli, Griffin Theatre Co) and Alison Chambers (Babette's Feast, Joining the Dots Theatre Co).
St Germain is known for plays that place historical figures into imagined circumstances (such as Freud’s Last Session). The truth is that in 1902 Albert and Mileva Einstein had a daughter but after 1904, the child was never seen or spoken of again. The play opens in 1942 with a journalist coming to interview Einstein but is she more interested in the public theories or the very private man? Relativity has St Germain’s winning trademark combination of intelligence, wit and heart.