Another Interesting Review of "Adam Smith: the Grand Tour"
“Anonymous” writes HERE in “The Flaneur”: {“an illustrated journal of global culture for the cultivated stroller of city streets”): “Edinburgh Fringe:
Adam Smith, Le Grand Tour"
“Bonnie Prince Charlie and Casanova are more
usual 18th century subjects for drama than Adam Smith. A swash here, a buckle
there, BPC and Casanova provide kilts and razzamatazz – but when it comes to
intellectual rigour they’re a bit lacking. For a play with more emphasis on the
enlightenment than lovers and battles, Adam Smith is an interesting choice.
He was an important member of the Scottish intelligentsia in the 18th
century and is famous for writing the first great book of economic analysis,
The Wealth of Nations. He also coined the phrase the Invisible Hand to refer
to…well, what exactly is one of the subjects of this play. Unlike other
18th century ideas (leeches, anyone?) Smith’s thought is still well regarded
and he is often the subject of economics lectures and articles. Where he is not
often to be found is in the theatre, which makes Compagnie Les
Labyrinthes’ Adam Smith Le Grand
Tour a unique proposition.
As a fan of Grand Tour literature I was looking forward to this new play
by the academic Vanessa Oltra. Adam Smith undertook a truncated Tour, not
making it to the great goals of Firenze, Roma and Venezia but staying in France
and Geneva. The play is billed as an invitation to follow in the economist’s
footsteps, however this is not a straight forward reenactment. Rather it is an
interpretation by two actors using questions about the life of Adam Smith as a
pretext for a tour around Edinburgh. Oltra aimed not to report on the journey,
but to examine the thoughts and sensations that she experienced. This is
presented to the audience as a mixture of live action and moving image, which
is projected onto the simple white scenery. The same actors appear on stage and
in the videos where they visit locations pertinent to Smith’s life, playing
roles of detectives, tourists and reporters.
This piece is located on the boundary between performance art and
theatre. Starring Frederic Kneip and the writer, the production is
directed by Gerard David. It would not be out of place in a contemporary
art gallery. Vanessa Oltra has an unusual background, being an associate
professor of Economics at the University Montesquieu-Bordeaux, but also having
studied at the Conservatoire d’Art dramatique in Merignac. The casting of an
economist as actor asks further questions of the role of economists in the
world and comments on the quality of the knowledge they peddle.
There are often issues with a piece of work that has been translated
from another language. Humour is notorious for not making the leap between
languages and references in the programme suggest that it is funnier in French
than it is in English. The language choice is presumably because a play about
Adam Smith in French would have had limited appeal in Edinburgh but there is no
compelling conceptual reason for the production to be in English. The use
of French actors was necessary for the reverse-Tour conceit, but some of the
words are heavily accented and difficult to follow.
Most fringe productions are put on in dark cellars underneath pubs but
Adam Smith Le Grand Tour is being performed in a well proportioned first-floor
room at the Institute francais d’Ecosse. It’s almost certainly the most elegant
room being used at the 2013 fringe.
Although I felt it lacked dramatic impetus, Adam Smith Le Grand Tour is
experimental and is unafraid to grasp at new subjects and means of portrayal.
As such it represents the sort of noble, non-commercial venture the fringe
needs.”
Comment
Edinburgh is abuzz now and for three weeks with
scores of performances from around the world and from domestic sources. The daily agenda of what’s on is packed
and is too much to read through in one sitting with its the many pages of small print.
These last few years I have picked out performances of plays, both
professional and amateur, on interpretations of aspects of Adam Smith’s life
and ideas.
This afternoon I hope to attend “Smith La
Grand Tour” and I shall report on what I see with my comments on Lost Legacy.
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