More News on the "Adam Smith, Le Grand Tour" Play Performing in Edinburgh
Nigel Cooper
(Theatre Critic) reviews the play (mentioned yesterday), “Adam Smith, Le Grand
Tour”, performing in Edinburgh at the French Institute, until 25 August (3pm) HERE
in “The Herald”
(Glasgow): “Smart
money as spotlight on Scot who gave us Wealth Of Nations”
“Money talks.
Or at least that's
the case judging by the foyer-full of French economists packed into a small studio
theatre ticked off a bustling shopping street in Bordeaux city centre.
The economists are
coming to the end of a week-long conference at the nearby university, and
clearly have plenty to say about it all.
“In what looks
suspiciously like an end of term treat, they are gathered to watch a
performance of Adam Smith, Le Grand Tour, a new play written and performed by
Vanessa Oltra with fellow actor Frederic Kneip. The production, by Compagnie
Les Labyrinthes, which arrived at the French Institute this week for an
Edinburgh Festival Fringe run, charts the journey of Mary and Fred Smith, who
travel to Edinburgh in search of the real Adam Smith, the Kirkcaldy-born moral
philosopher and seminal author of his 1776 tome, An Inquiry Into The Nature And
Causes Of The Wealth Of Nations. More often shortened to the catchier Wealth Of
Nations, this book is regarded as the first modern work of economics as we now
know them.
For director Gerard
David's multi-media production of this wryly clever hour-long show, Oltra and
Kneip travelled to Edinburgh in a real life quest, and film of them at
Canongate Kirkyard, where Smith is buried, and other locations appears
throughout the piece. For Oltra, who herself holds a PhD in Economics, and
divides her time between acting and lecturing at Bordeaux University, Adam
Smith, Le Grand Tour is clearly a labour of love that reflects her own
fascination with Smith.
"Several years
ago I had this idea to try to write a play about the authors who are supposed
to be the founding fathers of liberalism," Oltra says of her play's
origins.
"At first, I
wanted to look at several different authors. That turned out to be not such a
good idea, but I didn't want to make an academic play, so I decided to choose
Adam Smith, mainly because he's supposed to be the founding father of a lot of
things. That's according to academics, and I wanted to know why.
"I read several
different biographies, and became interested in his personal life. He was quite
a strange man, and two things interested me. The first was that, although he
was named as the founding father of so much, of capitalism and everything else,
yet in his own life, he never had children. This point touched me a lot. In
symbolic terms, it was a very strong image.
"Then I
researched how Smith was commemorated in Scotland, and I was fascinated by the
story of the statue of Smith in Edinburgh, which went up as recently as
2008."
Oltra is referring
to Sandy Stoddart's statue, erected in the High Street, and paid for by private
donations arranged by the Adam Smith Institute in London.
"I was very
interested in this story," Oltra says, "again, in symbolic terms,
that it went up just as the world entered into its financial crisis. There is
also the story of Smith's grave. I read a story by someone who went to visit
his grave, but the gates are padlocked, and you can't get in."
All of these
elements have been put into what is a very personal impressionistic collage
that praises Smith even as it questions how his legacy has been claimed by many
for their own political purposes.
Former UK Prime
Minister Margaret Thatcher was even reputed to have carried a copy of Wealth Of
Nations around with her.
"People use
Smith to try to explain everything," Oltra points out, "but for me he
has nothing to do with that. He was a philosopher. He never used the word
capitalism in his work. You can't find the word in any of his books, and you
can't find anything about globalisation, but people keep citing him as being the
founding father of everything. He was very cautious. Although he talked about
what became known as a free market economy, he also gave a warning, and said
that if we're not careful, people will only be interested in making a profit.”
Oltra's specific interest
in Smith stems from a set of interests she shares with her subject.
"It came out of
a combination of my interest in economic thought and theatre," she says.
"Smith was a theatre lover, and I was always involved in both worlds as
well.”
So much so, it
seems, that when she began lecturing in Bordeaux, Oltra also enrolled in a
theatre course. Since then, she has successfully [engaged] in both pursuits.
The character of Mary Smith in Adam Smith, Le Grand Voyage is clearly an
extension of herself, and Oltra is happy to admit "90% of it is my story
as well."
After the show in
Bordeaux, Oltra, Kneip and David took part in a discussion with the economists
who made up their audience. This was no usual after-show talk, however, as,
rather than issues about the play's construction and how it was presented,
questions thrown at Oltra in particular challenged her critiques of how Smith is
sometimes perceived.
A former lecturer of
Oltra's even went so far as to ask her why she was increasingly critical of how
economics is taught, and if she applies it to her own teaching.
"We have a
certain degree of freedom," she says, diplomatically, "but you also
have to respect certain things. I try to do things differently, but there has
to be a balance."
Given her very
personal views of Smith, what, one wonders, does Oltra think Smith's real
legacy is?
"For me,"
she says, "the most important contribution was his Theory Of Moral
Sentiment, which he wrote 17 years before Wealth Of Nations. He described human
nature so precisely, and we can learn so much from that about things, much more
than we can from Wealth Of Nations."
Adam
Smith, Le Grand Tour, French Institute until August 25th, 3pm.
Comment
Should
you visit Scotland for the Edinburgh International Festival I recommend that you read
“The Herald” too; its coverage, as the long-standing rival to The Scotsman
(Edinburgh), is well worth it journalistically. It is the other national Scottish newspaper and can give
visitors a useful comparison with two excellent examples of what is available
in Scotland for regular readers.
Today,
I received a ticket paid by and from my daughter for the Friday performance of
this play and I shall post a report of what I think of it over the weekend.
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