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A Number

A Number is a 2002 English play by Caryl Churchill. The story, set in the near future, is structured around the conflict between a father (Salter) and his sons (Bernard 1, Bernard 2, and Michael Black) – two of whom are clones of the first one. The play addresses the subject of human cloning and identity, especially nature versus nurture. Many critics over the years have lauded A Number, arguing Churchill created a work of significant intellectual depth with effective economy of style.

A Number
Written byCaryl Churchill
CharactersSalter
Bernard 1
Bernard 2
Michael Black
Date premiered23 September 2002 (2002-09-23)
Place premieredRoyal Court Theatre,
London, England
Original languageEnglish
SubjectHuman cloning and identity

Contextual information edit

A Number was first produced in 2002 at the Royal Court Theatre, London.

The play was written during a time of public debate over the ethics of cloning. The cloning of Dolly the sheep, the creation of human embryos at Advanced Cell Technology, and the cloning of a kitten[1] gave rise to controversy concerning possible human cloning.

Plot synopsis edit

Scene 1: Bernard 2 ("B2" in the script) has discovered that he is one of a number of clones. Salter explains that he agreed to a cloning experiment to try again at parenting his first son, who had died, but, unbeknownst to Salter, the doctors unethically made several more clones. Salter decides that they should sue the doctors, which soothes the shaken Bernard 2.

Scene 2: An angry Bernard 1 ("B1") visits Salter for the first time since his childhood. We learn that Salter sent him to a clinical home after the suicide of his mother had left them both in a constant state of fear and pain. B1 has learned about the clones, and is furious at his father for doing it, as well as for his neglectful and traumatic upbringing. Salter admits that the clones were meant to give him another chance at raising a child without repeating his many parental mistakes. B1 grows increasingly agitated and threatens to murder B2.

Scene 3: B2 speaks to Salter after having met B1 in the park. He has learned the truth about the situation, and now hates Salter for what he has done. B2 decides to leave the country for a while, both to get away from Salter and because he fears that B1 might try to kill him. Salter tries to convince him not to go, or at least to come back soon, but B2 refuses.

Scene 4: B1 tells Salter that when B2 left the country, B1 followed him and killed him. Salter, stricken with grief, demands to know the details, but B1 says little.

Scene 5: Salter is meeting with one of the other clones of his son, Michael Black. We learn that Bernard 1 has killed himself, and Salter is now planning to meet with the other clones. Michael, who never knew Salter, is a happily married maths teacher with three children. He is completely undisturbed that he is a clone, and tells Salter that he does not care. Salter finds this very unsettling. He demands to know more about him, something personal and unique, but Michael can only answer superficially and Salter is left unsatisfied.

Characters edit

  • Salter: a man in his early sixties. He was married and had one son, named Bernard. His wife committed suicide by throwing herself under a train when their son was only two. Salter attempted to raise their son alone, but was neglectful due to his drinking and the son's issues, and eventually sent his son away. He then has his son cloned, creating Bernard 2, in an attempt to try raising him again and being a better father. He has attempted to hide the truth of what he's done from his sons, and the story is driven by the facts coming to light.
  • Bernard (B2): Salter's son, thirty-five, cloned from Bernard 1 to replace him. He is very mild-mannered and emotional.
  • Bernard (B1): Salter's son, forty. First and original son of Salter. He was a difficult and disturbed child who was neglected by Salter and then sent away when he was 4. He grew to have an explosive temper and hate Salter for what he did.
  • Michael Black: Salter's son, thirty-five. An unauthorized clone of Salter’s first son. He is married with three children, the oldest aged twelve, and is a mathematics teacher.

Staging edit

Churchill gives no stage directions and no indication of a setting for the play. In the 2002 production, the stage was described by one critic as a “bare blank design” with “no relation to domestic realism.” [2] The costumes of the play were as simple as the stage design. Salter always wore a rumpled looking suit, sometimes expensive looking, but sometimes not. The various Bernards usually wore jeans and a T-shirt, but sometimes a sweatshirt.[3]

Productions edit

Original production edit

The play debuted at the Royal Court Theatre in London on 23 September 2002. The production was directed by Stephen Daldry and designed by Ian MacNeil and featured the following cast:

Lighting was designed by Rick Fisher and Ian Dickinson was the sound designer. The play won the 2002 Evening Standard Award for Best Play.[4]

Revivals edit

The play was revived at the Sheffield Crucible studio in October 2006 starring real-life father and son Timothy West and Samuel West. This production later played at the Chocolate Factory in 2010 and at the Fugard Theatre, Cape Town in 2011.

The play was revived at The Nuffield Theatre (Southampton) [5] in February 2014 with John and Lex Shrapnel to huge critical acclaim.[6] It transferred to the Young Vic Theatre in June 2015. Zinnie Harris directed the play at the Royal Lyceum Theatre in Edinburgh in April 2017.[7][8]

The play was revived again at the Bridge Theatre, in February 2020, with Roger Allam and Colin Morgan, directed by Polly Findlay.[9]

The play received a London revival in January 2022 at The Old Vic, with Lennie James and Paapa Essiedu, directed by Lyndsey Turner.[10] The production received a Laurence Olivier Award nomination for Best Revival in the same year.[11]

US premiere edit

In 2004, the play made its American debut at the New York Theatre Workshop in a production starring Sam Shepard (later played by Arliss Howard) and Dallas Roberts.

LA/OC, California premiere edit

In February/March 2009, the play made its Los Angeles/Orange County debut at the Rude Guerrilla Theater Company in a production directed by Scott Barber, starring Vince Campbell and Mark Coyan.

Reception edit

Ben Brantley of The New York Times described A Number as "stunning" and "a gripping dramatic consideration of what happens to autonomous identity in a world where people can be cloned".[12] James M. Brandon had mixed sentiments in Theatre Journal, arguing that while it "is a wellwritten play—evocative, disturbing, and with more than one surprise—it remains a troubled one that seems, in production, unfinished. " The critic disputed comparisons of the broken dialogue to that of David Mamet and said that "the language here is not nearly as compelling on the stage". However, Brandon praised the final scene as "brilliant" and said that one of its characters "serves as a welcome reminder that it is possible to have an ostensibly normal life", ultimately describing A Number as "one of the more intellectually vital scripts to emerge in the new century" despite shortcomings.[13]

In a 2006 review of a later Churchill work, The Independent's Paul Taylor described the play as one of the best dramas of the new millennium, and as "superbly compressed and economic".[14] After watching a performance featuring John and Lex Shrapnel, Lyn Gardner of The Guardian dubbed the play "[p]unchy, compact and endlessly inquisitive," arguing that it "is no simple warning against the perils of science messing with nature, but a complex and humane study of parental guilt, regret and responsibility and what it really means to be a father or son."[15] Conversely, Jane Shillings of The Telegraph argued, "The highly wrought writing veers at times towards the mannered, leaving a faint sense that the style of Churchill’s play exceeds its substance, and the issue of cloning has lost its urgency".[16] Don Aucoin of The Boston Globe praised the way the playwright "devotes no time to preamble or writerly throat-clearing, but plunges us straightaway into the play’s central dilemma".[17] In the Chicago Tribune, Chris Jones described A Number as "masterfully written".[18]

After seeing a 2020 Bridge Theatre performance, Nick Curtis of Evening Standard argued, "If the background logistics are sketchy – who made the human copies, and why? – the relationships between Salter and his offspring, and their differing reactions to finding that they are not unique, are right on the money. [...] It’s almost exactly an hour long and the ending is abrupt, but Churchill packs more ideas and feeling into that time than most dramatists manage at twice the length."[19] Clive Davis of The Times, however, panned the play as "both too short and too long" after seeing the same performance.[15] Matt Wolf lauded A Number as a "beautiful play", and wrote that it "works not least as a thriller or bit of forensic detection, as Churchill plants clues prompting a reevaluation of the narrative at every turn."[20][13] Arjun Neil Alim of The Independent stated that "Churchill, a political playwright par excellence, tactfully references current events. [...] Are 'Who are you?' and 'What are you made from?' the same question? Churchill’s answer comes in the form of a character who defines himself by his deeds and his loved ones, rather than the circumstances of his birth."[21] Andrzej Lukowski of Time Out called the play a "masterpiece".[12]

Steve Dinneen argued in City A.M. that the work "is remarkable in the way it so gracefully touches upon the great philosophical questions without ever feeling didactic. A Number is no cold thought experiment, but a quiet rumination on human nature". Dineen wrote that Salter's interludes "say as much as an hour’s worth of dialogue".[22] Franco Milazzo of Londonist summarised the play as asking "what makes you you?" [23] Arifa Akbar of The Guardian said that "Churchill’s linguistic tics – of interruptions and half-finished sentences – create a hyperreal effect and enable Salter’s obfuscation".[18] Richard Pahl of Northwest Herald billed A Number as an "engaging meditation on human cloning, personal identity and the conflicting claims of nature and nurture". Pahl wrote that the work "offers intellectual and emotional depth, and illustrates the ways people rationalize bad behavior and unthinkingly objectify others, including their own flesh and blood. It asks important questions."[19]

Interpretation edit

Dinneen argued that the play is about "our desire to be unique, for our lives to have meaning, for our imperfect minds and bodies to somehow achieve perfect ends."[22] Pahl wrote that questions asked by the play are, "If we had a do-over, could we atone for our mistakes? What is the value of a human life? What is the source of our individuality?"[19]

Adaptations edit

A Number was adapted by Caryl Churchill for television, in a co-production between the BBC and HBO Films.[24] Starring Rhys Ifans and Tom Wilkinson, it was broadcast on BBC Two on 10 September 2008.[25]

References edit

  1. ^ Kolata, Gina (15 February 2002). "What Is Warm and Fuzzy Forever? With Cloning, Kitty". The New York Times. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
  2. ^ De Jongh, Nicholas. "A Number." Evening Standard [London] 27 Sept. 2002.
  3. ^ Basset, Kate. "A Number". Independent on Sunday [London] 29 Sept. 2002.
  4. ^ Evening Standard Awards October 6, 2010, at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 8 October 2009
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 28 October 2016. Retrieved 26 March 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  6. ^ "A Number – review". the Guardian. 14 February 2014.
  7. ^ "Lyceum Season 2016/17 : All Edinburgh Theatre.com".
  8. ^ "The Guardian: "A Number review", 10 April 2017". TheGuardian.com. 10 April 2017. Retrieved 15 February 2022.
  9. ^ "The Stage: "A Number", 19 February 2020". Retrieved 15 February 2022.
  10. ^ "London Theatre: A Number review". 2 February 2022. Retrieved 15 February 2022.
  11. ^ Yossman, K. J. (8 March 2022). "Eddie Redmayne, Jessie Buckley and Emma Corrin Nominated for Olivier Awards 2022". Variety. Retrieved 9 March 2022.
  12. ^ a b Brantley, Ben (8 December 2004). "My 3 Sons: Cloning's Unexpected Results". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 22 May 2020.
  13. ^ a b Brandon, James M. (October 2006). "A Number (review)". Theatre Journal. 58 (3): 502–504. doi:10.1353/tj.2006.0145 – via Project MUSE.
  14. ^ Taylor, Paul (24 November 2006). "Drunk Enough To Say I Love You?, Royal Court Theatre, London". The Independent. Retrieved 27 May 2020.[permanent dead link]
  15. ^ a b Gardner, Lyn (14 February 2014). "A Number – review". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 23 May 2020.
  16. ^ Shilling, Jane (8 July 2015). "A Number, Young Vic, review: 'a virtuoso intensity'". The Telegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 22 May 2020.
  17. ^ Aucoin, Don (14 October 2015). "'A Number' adds up to tense drama at New Rep - The Boston Globe". The Boston Globe. Retrieved 10 July 2020.
  18. ^ a b Jones, Chris (1 April 2019). "'A Number' at Writers Theatre: Remember when cloning was our biggest fear?". chicagotribune.com. Retrieved 22 May 2020.
  19. ^ a b c Curtis, Nick (19 February 2020). "A Number review: A sharp meditation on cloning and identity". Evening Standard. Retrieved 23 May 2020.
  20. ^ Wolf, Matt (21 February 2020). "A Number, Bridge Theatre review - a dream team dazzles anew". The Arts Desk. Retrieved 21 May 2020.
  21. ^ Alim, Arjun Neil (21 February 2020). "A Number is a brief and beautiful investigation into identity – review". The Independent. from the original on 21 February 2020. Retrieved 23 May 2020.
  22. ^ a b Dinneen, Steve (27 February 2020). "A Number at the Bridge Theatre review: Caryl Churchill's sci-fi drama asks what it means to be human". City A.M. Retrieved 22 May 2020.
  23. ^ "Review: Double Trouble in Caryl Churchill's Clone Classic". 2 February 2022.
  24. ^ "Uma Thurman, Rhys Ifans and Tom Wilkinson star in two plays for BBC Two" (Press release). BBC. 19 June 2008. Retrieved 9 September 2008.
  25. ^ "A Number". BBC Two Listings. BBC. Retrieved 9 September 2008.

External links edit

  • Review of original British productions
  • Guardian review of Royal Court production
  • A Number at IMDb  

number, this, article, about, play, other, uses, disambiguation, 2002, english, play, caryl, churchill, story, near, future, structured, around, conflict, between, father, salter, sons, bernard, bernard, michael, black, whom, clones, first, play, addresses, su. This article is about the play For other uses see A Number disambiguation A Number is a 2002 English play by Caryl Churchill The story set in the near future is structured around the conflict between a father Salter and his sons Bernard 1 Bernard 2 and Michael Black two of whom are clones of the first one The play addresses the subject of human cloning and identity especially nature versus nurture Many critics over the years have lauded A Number arguing Churchill created a work of significant intellectual depth with effective economy of style A NumberWritten byCaryl ChurchillCharactersSalterBernard 1Bernard 2Michael BlackDate premiered23 September 2002 2002 09 23 Place premieredRoyal Court Theatre London EnglandOriginal languageEnglishSubjectHuman cloning and identity Contents 1 Contextual information 2 Plot synopsis 3 Characters 4 Staging 5 Productions 5 1 Original production 5 2 Revivals 5 3 US premiere 5 4 LA OC California premiere 6 Reception 7 Interpretation 8 Adaptations 9 References 10 External linksContextual information editA Number was first produced in 2002 at the Royal Court Theatre London The play was written during a time of public debate over the ethics of cloning The cloning of Dolly the sheep the creation of human embryos at Advanced Cell Technology and the cloning of a kitten 1 gave rise to controversy concerning possible human cloning Plot synopsis editScene 1 Bernard 2 B2 in the script has discovered that he is one of a number of clones Salter explains that he agreed to a cloning experiment to try again at parenting his first son who had died but unbeknownst to Salter the doctors unethically made several more clones Salter decides that they should sue the doctors which soothes the shaken Bernard 2 Scene 2 An angry Bernard 1 B1 visits Salter for the first time since his childhood We learn that Salter sent him to a clinical home after the suicide of his mother had left them both in a constant state of fear and pain B1 has learned about the clones and is furious at his father for doing it as well as for his neglectful and traumatic upbringing Salter admits that the clones were meant to give him another chance at raising a child without repeating his many parental mistakes B1 grows increasingly agitated and threatens to murder B2 Scene 3 B2 speaks to Salter after having met B1 in the park He has learned the truth about the situation and now hates Salter for what he has done B2 decides to leave the country for a while both to get away from Salter and because he fears that B1 might try to kill him Salter tries to convince him not to go or at least to come back soon but B2 refuses Scene 4 B1 tells Salter that when B2 left the country B1 followed him and killed him Salter stricken with grief demands to know the details but B1 says little Scene 5 Salter is meeting with one of the other clones of his son Michael Black We learn that Bernard 1 has killed himself and Salter is now planning to meet with the other clones Michael who never knew Salter is a happily married maths teacher with three children He is completely undisturbed that he is a clone and tells Salter that he does not care Salter finds this very unsettling He demands to know more about him something personal and unique but Michael can only answer superficially and Salter is left unsatisfied Characters editSalter a man in his early sixties He was married and had one son named Bernard His wife committed suicide by throwing herself under a train when their son was only two Salter attempted to raise their son alone but was neglectful due to his drinking and the son s issues and eventually sent his son away He then has his son cloned creating Bernard 2 in an attempt to try raising him again and being a better father He has attempted to hide the truth of what he s done from his sons and the story is driven by the facts coming to light Bernard B2 Salter s son thirty five cloned from Bernard 1 to replace him He is very mild mannered and emotional Bernard B1 Salter s son forty First and original son of Salter He was a difficult and disturbed child who was neglected by Salter and then sent away when he was 4 He grew to have an explosive temper and hate Salter for what he did Michael Black Salter s son thirty five An unauthorized clone of Salter s first son He is married with three children the oldest aged twelve and is a mathematics teacher Staging editChurchill gives no stage directions and no indication of a setting for the play In the 2002 production the stage was described by one critic as a bare blank design with no relation to domestic realism 2 The costumes of the play were as simple as the stage design Salter always wore a rumpled looking suit sometimes expensive looking but sometimes not The various Bernards usually wore jeans and a T shirt but sometimes a sweatshirt 3 Productions editOriginal production edit The play debuted at the Royal Court Theatre in London on 23 September 2002 The production was directed by Stephen Daldry and designed by Ian MacNeil and featured the following cast Salter Michael Gambon Bernard 1 Bernard 2 and Michael Black Daniel Craig Lighting was designed by Rick Fisher and Ian Dickinson was the sound designer The play won the 2002 Evening Standard Award for Best Play 4 Revivals edit The play was revived at the Sheffield Crucible studio in October 2006 starring real life father and son Timothy West and Samuel West This production later played at the Chocolate Factory in 2010 and at the Fugard Theatre Cape Town in 2011 The play was revived at The Nuffield Theatre Southampton 5 in February 2014 with John and Lex Shrapnel to huge critical acclaim 6 It transferred to the Young Vic Theatre in June 2015 Zinnie Harris directed the play at the Royal Lyceum Theatre in Edinburgh in April 2017 7 8 The play was revived again at the Bridge Theatre in February 2020 with Roger Allam and Colin Morgan directed by Polly Findlay 9 The play received a London revival in January 2022 at The Old Vic with Lennie James and Paapa Essiedu directed by Lyndsey Turner 10 The production received a Laurence Olivier Award nomination for Best Revival in the same year 11 US premiere edit In 2004 the play made its American debut at the New York Theatre Workshop in a production starring Sam Shepard later played by Arliss Howard and Dallas Roberts LA OC California premiere edit In February March 2009 the play made its Los Angeles Orange County debut at the Rude Guerrilla Theater Company in a production directed by Scott Barber starring Vince Campbell and Mark Coyan Reception editBen Brantley of The New York Times described A Number as stunning and a gripping dramatic consideration of what happens to autonomous identity in a world where people can be cloned 12 James M Brandon had mixed sentiments in Theatre Journal arguing that while it is a wellwritten play evocative disturbing and with more than one surprise it remains a troubled one that seems in production unfinished The critic disputed comparisons of the broken dialogue to that of David Mamet and said that the language here is not nearly as compelling on the stage However Brandon praised the final scene as brilliant and said that one of its characters serves as a welcome reminder that it is possible to have an ostensibly normal life ultimately describing A Number as one of the more intellectually vital scripts to emerge in the new century despite shortcomings 13 In a 2006 review of a later Churchill work The Independent s Paul Taylor described the play as one of the best dramas of the new millennium and as superbly compressed and economic 14 After watching a performance featuring John and Lex Shrapnel Lyn Gardner of The Guardian dubbed the play p unchy compact and endlessly inquisitive arguing that it is no simple warning against the perils of science messing with nature but a complex and humane study of parental guilt regret and responsibility and what it really means to be a father or son 15 Conversely Jane Shillings of The Telegraph argued The highly wrought writing veers at times towards the mannered leaving a faint sense that the style of Churchill s play exceeds its substance and the issue of cloning has lost its urgency 16 Don Aucoin of The Boston Globe praised the way the playwright devotes no time to preamble or writerly throat clearing but plunges us straightaway into the play s central dilemma 17 In the Chicago Tribune Chris Jones described A Number as masterfully written 18 After seeing a 2020 Bridge Theatre performance Nick Curtis of Evening Standard argued If the background logistics are sketchy who made the human copies and why the relationships between Salter and his offspring and their differing reactions to finding that they are not unique are right on the money It s almost exactly an hour long and the ending is abrupt but Churchill packs more ideas and feeling into that time than most dramatists manage at twice the length 19 Clive Davis of The Times however panned the play as both too short and too long after seeing the same performance 15 Matt Wolf lauded A Number as a beautiful play and wrote that it works not least as a thriller or bit of forensic detection as Churchill plants clues prompting a reevaluation of the narrative at every turn 20 13 Arjun Neil Alim of The Independent stated that Churchill a political playwright par excellence tactfully references current events Are Who are you and What are you made from the same question Churchill s answer comes in the form of a character who defines himself by his deeds and his loved ones rather than the circumstances of his birth 21 Andrzej Lukowski of Time Out called the play a masterpiece 12 Steve Dinneen argued in City A M that the work is remarkable in the way it so gracefully touches upon the great philosophical questions without ever feeling didactic A Number is no cold thought experiment but a quiet rumination on human nature Dineen wrote that Salter s interludes say as much as an hour s worth of dialogue 22 Franco Milazzo of Londonist summarised the play as asking what makes you you 23 Arifa Akbar of The Guardian said that Churchill s linguistic tics of interruptions and half finished sentences create a hyperreal effect and enable Salter s obfuscation 18 Richard Pahl of Northwest Herald billed A Number as an engaging meditation on human cloning personal identity and the conflicting claims of nature and nurture Pahl wrote that the work offers intellectual and emotional depth and illustrates the ways people rationalize bad behavior and unthinkingly objectify others including their own flesh and blood It asks important questions 19 Interpretation editDinneen argued that the play is about our desire to be unique for our lives to have meaning for our imperfect minds and bodies to somehow achieve perfect ends 22 Pahl wrote that questions asked by the play are If we had a do over could we atone for our mistakes What is the value of a human life What is the source of our individuality 19 Adaptations editA Number was adapted by Caryl Churchill for television in a co production between the BBC and HBO Films 24 Starring Rhys Ifans and Tom Wilkinson it was broadcast on BBC Two on 10 September 2008 25 References edit Kolata Gina 15 February 2002 What Is Warm and Fuzzy Forever With Cloning Kitty The New York Times Retrieved 6 February 2022 De Jongh Nicholas A Number Evening Standard London 27 Sept 2002 Basset Kate A Number Independent on Sunday London 29 Sept 2002 Evening Standard Awards Archived October 6 2010 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 8 October 2009 Home Nuffield Theatre Southampton Archived from the original on 28 October 2016 Retrieved 26 March 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link A Number review the Guardian 14 February 2014 Lyceum Season 2016 17 All Edinburgh Theatre com The Guardian A Number review 10 April 2017 TheGuardian com 10 April 2017 Retrieved 15 February 2022 The Stage A Number 19 February 2020 Retrieved 15 February 2022 London Theatre A Number review 2 February 2022 Retrieved 15 February 2022 Yossman K J 8 March 2022 Eddie Redmayne Jessie Buckley and Emma Corrin Nominated for Olivier Awards 2022 Variety Retrieved 9 March 2022 a b Brantley Ben 8 December 2004 My 3 Sons Cloning s Unexpected Results The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 22 May 2020 a b Brandon James M October 2006 A Number review Theatre Journal 58 3 502 504 doi 10 1353 tj 2006 0145 via Project MUSE Taylor Paul 24 November 2006 Drunk Enough To Say I Love You Royal Court Theatre London The Independent Retrieved 27 May 2020 permanent dead link a b Gardner Lyn 14 February 2014 A Number review The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 23 May 2020 Shilling Jane 8 July 2015 A Number Young Vic review a virtuoso intensity The Telegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Retrieved 22 May 2020 Aucoin Don 14 October 2015 A Number adds up to tense drama at New Rep The Boston Globe The Boston Globe Retrieved 10 July 2020 a b Jones Chris 1 April 2019 A Number at Writers Theatre Remember when cloning was our biggest fear chicagotribune com Retrieved 22 May 2020 a b c Curtis Nick 19 February 2020 A Number review A sharp meditation on cloning and identity Evening Standard Retrieved 23 May 2020 Wolf Matt 21 February 2020 A Number Bridge Theatre review a dream team dazzles anew The Arts Desk Retrieved 21 May 2020 Alim Arjun Neil 21 February 2020 A Number is a brief and beautiful investigation into identity review The Independent Archived from the original on 21 February 2020 Retrieved 23 May 2020 a b Dinneen Steve 27 February 2020 A Number at the Bridge Theatre review Caryl Churchill s sci fi drama asks what it means to be human City A M Retrieved 22 May 2020 Review Double Trouble in Caryl Churchill s Clone Classic 2 February 2022 Uma Thurman Rhys Ifans and Tom Wilkinson star in two plays for BBC Two Press release BBC 19 June 2008 Retrieved 9 September 2008 A Number BBC Two Listings BBC Retrieved 9 September 2008 External links editReview of original British productions New York Theatre Workshop website for American production Guardian review of Royal Court production Reviews of the 2006 Sheffield revival A Number at IMDb nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title A Number amp oldid 1197859625, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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