One day during the run of Michael Fryan's play
Copenhagen, a curious letter arrived from a
housewife in Chiswick. She enclosed a few faded pages of
barely legible German which she thought might have some
relevance to the mystery at the play's heart. They
turned out to mark the start of a long and winding
trail. The subject of Copenhagen is the
strange visit that the German physicist, Werner
Heisenberg, made to his former Danish colleague, Niels
Bohr in 1941. The two old friends now found themselves
on opposite sides in a world war, and Heisenberg could
not explain to Bohr that he was running the Nazis'
secret atomic programme. His intentions have intrigued
and baffled historians, and the hitherto unpublished
German documents which Celia Rhys-Evans now began to
send Michael Frayn cast a remarkable new light on
certain aspects of the story. The gradual emergence
of these papers was followed with particularly close
interest by the actor, David Burke, who was playing
Niels Bohr, and who had happened to have a wide
experience of documents of this sort. When it was all
over David Burke and Michael Frayn sat down together,
rather as Bohr and Heisenberg do in the play, to try to
unravel the mystery, and, like Bohr and Heisenberg, to
confront once again the eternal difficulty of knowing
why we do what we do.
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