David Hare play about coronavirus experience starring Ralph Fiennes to open this month
Government’s plan to reopen theatres was last month delayed until at least 15 August
David Hare’s experiences with the coronavirus will be brought to the stage this autumn in a new play starring Ralph Fiennes.
The playwright, who is best known for shows including Pravda and Racing Demon, will premiere his new show, Beat the Devil, at London’s Bridge Theatre from 27 August to 31 October.
The play addresses Hare’s personal experience of contracting the virus on the same day that the UK went into lockdown, as well as his anger at the government’s response to the crisis.
Described as “a Covid monologue”, Fiennes plays Hare as he battles with “the delirium of his illness, which mix with fear, dream, honest medicine and dishonest politics to create a monologue of furious urgency and power”.
Hare, 73, has previously said that the government’s handling of the crisis was worse than that of Iraq or the Suez crisis, saying: “To watch a weasel-worded parade of ministers shirking responsibility for their failures and confecting non-apologies to the dead and dying has seen British public life sink as low as I can remember in my entire lifetime.”
The Bridge Theatre plans to reopen in September with socially distanced audiences but is waiting for word from the government that live performance can go ahead.
On 31 July, the return of indoor theatre performances was delayed until at least 15 August.
Subscribe to Independent Premium to bookmark this article
Want to bookmark your favourite articles and stories to read or reference later? Start your Independent Premium subscription today.
Join our commenting forum
Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies