Saturday, March 1, 2025

The Antiquities

 The Antiquities
Playwrights Horizons
February 28, 2025 

Photo coourtesy of Playwrights Horizons

Playwrights Horizons has partnered with Vineyard Theatre and Goodman Theatre in the production of Jordan Harrison’s The Antiquities.  This intelligent and philosophical theatre piece leaves the audience with a lot to ponder.  The play reflects the evolution of mankind as a steppingstone to Artificial Intelligence.  The structure of the piece is unique.  It is a series of disjointed scenes that travel from the late 1800s to the late 2200s.  The strength of the fragmented events is the through-line of mankind’s yearning to connect to their departed loved ones.  The play is skillfully co-directed by David Cromer and Caitlin Sullivan.  They fearlessly lead a cast of nine amazing actors who create numerous characters in this evolutionary journey.

Photo courtesy of Playwrights Horizons

The play is a “tour of the permanent collection in the museum of late human antiquities.”  It opens with two robotic women directly addressing the audience, asking them to imagine that they are present in human form for the tour.  They transform into Mary Shelley and Claire Clairmont, the mother of Lord Byron’s daughter, as they lead the audience into the first exhibit in the museum.  It is the night when Mary Shelley accepted the challenge to write “Frankenstein.”  Subsequent exhibits include a scene in the 1970s, where a tech geek has his first breakthrough in developing a robot that can make decisions on its own.  Another exhibit skips a few decades to when a family gets its first home computer and experiences the internet for the first time.  Then, sometime in the 1990s, Robin (the fictional version of Alexis) is developed.  As the exhibits move past the year 2025, AI becomes more sophisticated and begins to take over.  

Photo courtesy of Playwrights Horizons
After the audience views the collected artifacts (props from the scenes), the exhibits are revisited.  The characters’ reliance on their devices during these time periods is further explored and emotionally understood.  Their loss and loneliness motivate their reliance and acceptance on AI.  The tour ends in the Mary Shelley exhibit, where the “Frankenstein” story is shared.  It is different.  It now includes the building of a computer, which is a seed for the development of higher intelligence. 

Photo courtesy of Playwrights Horizons
Jordan Harrison has masterfully crafted a startling inquiry into the human experience that cannot be
overlooked.  Since the scenes contain historic and well-known facts, the fictional elements that drive the theme become believable.  This play is intellectually engaging as you follow the through-line and buy into the conclusions drawn from the future AI society, which are illustrated in the final Mary Shelley scene.  They include themselves in that story in order to verify their existence.  To this higher intelligence, human beings are nothing more than a stepping-stone in their own valuable evolution.
 

There are only a few performances of The Antiquities remaining before it closes on March 2.  If you can get a ticket, go with a friend.  You will have a lot to talk about.   

Domenick Danza

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