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John Nathan

By

John Nathan,

John NAthan

Opinion

It will soon be time to conquer our many fears

August 7, 2020 10:09
Juliet Stevenson in Blindness
2 min read

Last week I was on the panel of one of Hampstead Synagogue’s “Where are we now?” discussions. The online series takes stock of how the pandemic has affected the Jewish community and this time the focus was culture.

How, messaged one viewer, might she be reassured that when theatres eventually opened their doors, it would be safe to walk through?

It was a well timed question. This week is a milestone of sorts in theatre’s fightback against Covid. For the first time since March 17, the doors of a London theatre have reopened. Granted, Blindness, which is at the Donmar Warehouse, isn’t exactly a play. It is more of a sound installation, using eerily convincing binaural sound technology, in which socially distancing audiences of 40 are allowed to pass through the building and the dangerous world within, conjured by Simon Stephens’s adaptation of the dystopian novel by the Nobel Prize-winning José Saramago.

The story tells of a mysterious epidemic that causes blindness. The symptoms happen so quickly that in the opening scene, described by narrator Juliet Stevenson, who plays the suburban wife of an optician, we hear of a driver who was able to see perfectly well when he stopped at a set of traffic lights, but is completely blind by the time they turn green.