Tom Stoppard's play Jumpers has been described thus: "The Radical Liberal Party has made the ex-Minister of Agriculture Archbishop of Canterbury, British astronauts are scrapping with each other on the moon, and spritely academics steal about London by night indulging in murderous gymnastics: this is the kind of manic, futuristic, topsy-turvy world in which Stoppard's dazzling new play is set. And if I add that the influences apparently include Wittgenstein, Magritte, the Goons, Robert Dhery, Joe Orton, and The Avengers, you will have some idea of the heady brew Stoppard has concocted. The protagonists include an aging Professor of Moral Philosophy - trying to compose a lecture on "Man - Good, Bad or Indifferent" - while ignoring a corpse in the next room; his beautiful young wife, an ex-musical comedy Queen, lasciviously entertaining his university boss down the hall; her husband's specially trained hare, Thumper; and a chorus of gymnasts, Jumpers" (Michael Billington, in The Guardian). This synopsis of Jumpers shows it as it is: Jumpers was never going to be an easy play to view, or to understand.
Jumpers can be read in many ways, as a play that concerns itself the idea of belief: the belief that there can be a moral philosophy, the belief in the solid, basically good, nature of man, the belief in the power of relationships, the belief in an all-seeing, all-knowing being, God. The play, read in the light of beliefs, can be seen as a great moral discussion on the power of belief, to support, but also to corrupt. For example, in the play, the academic believes so much in the theoretical side of what he is doing, and is so consumed by his theoretical, philosophical wanderings, that he fails to see practical examples of his philosophy, he misses his 'philosophical questions in action' (and thus through his belief in his philosophy, becomes corrupted).
The play asks a great deal of its audience, its actors, indeed, asks the audience and actors to lay themselves in the hands of Stoppard, to believe in Stoppard, as the issues...
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