- Source: Calabi-Yau (play)
Calabi-Yau is a 2001 play written by playwright Susanna Speier with songs and music by Stefan Weisman, based on physicist Brian Greene's national bestseller The Elegant Universe.
The musical play is a multimedia sub-subatomic adventure story about a documentarian lost in an inner loop of an abandoned track of the New York Subway system. He encounters MTA workers who are attempting to prove string theory by building a particle accelerator in abandoned subway tunnels beneath downtown New York City. The MTA track workers lead the documentarian to a gatekeeper named Lucy and her grandfather, who is engineering the particle accelerator. A string explains string theory as a Calabi-Yau tells the story of Alexander the Great cutting the Gordian knot.
It premiered as a workshop production at the Lincoln Center and HERE Arts Center sponsored American Living Room Festival in 2001. Calabi-Yau was produced and performed at HERE in 2002.
Eugene Calabi and Shing-Tung Yau, for whom Calabi-Yau manifolds are named, attempted to attend the play but were not let in since no one believed they were who they said they were.
References
Les Gutman (2002-03-17). "Calabi-Yau, a CurtainUp review". CurtainUp. Retrieved 2008-10-05.
Neil Genzlinger (2002-03-27). "THEATER REVIEW; In Abandoned Subway Tunnels, Building a Particle Accelerator". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-10-05.
External links
http://www.susannaspeier.com/scripts/calabi-yau/ at Susanna Speier's website
HERE website
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Calabi-Yau (play)
- Mirror symmetry (string theory)
- Generalized complex structure
- Compactification (physics)
- Constant scalar curvature Kähler metric
- M-theory
- String theory
- Richard Thomas (mathematician)
- Victor Ginzburg
- Perverse sheaf