True story. New York, 1944. Ted Hall, 19, the youngest Physicist in Oppenheimer’s Atomic Bomb Project, asks himself the giant question: will the world be safer after the War if he gives atomic secrets to the Russians? And he does. From teenage friendship to stark treason. From the idyll of young love to the murky world of spies. From big decision to deep consequence. And from high science to Hiroshima.
Written and performed by Jem Rolls: the creator of THE INVENTOR OF ALL THINGS: ***** Edmonton Journal, ***** StarPhoenix. And THE WALK IN THE SNOW: ***** CBC, ***** Global. Each achieved multiple sellouts at Ottawa Fringe. Did Ted save the world?
Review from apartment 13. June 14, 2024
At 18 years old, if you had believed you could save the world from destruction BUT it required you to betray your country, would you have done it?
Ted Hall did. The youngest physicist working at Los Alamos on the Manhattan Project. He was working on the plutonium implosion mechanism — the one in the “Fat Man” bomb dropped on Nagasaki that killed 70,000 people. He led the team working on this mechanism when he and Savvy Sax, a flakey Harvard University chum, decided to pass documents describing the bomb to the Russians. They wanted to destroy the US’s monopoly on this uber-destructive weapon. They reasoned that if two countries had it, neither would use it.
Jem Rolls’ riveting well-researched monologue is Ted Hall’s story. On opening night, his audience was totally engaged – Rolls is a great storyteller.
Hall delighted in the glorious science being done in Los Alamos but was appalled at the idea of the US dominating the post-war world — perhaps becoming a fascist state. Hall had no idea of Stalin’s vicious crimes in the USSR — the manufactured starvation in Ukraine, the gulags, the fearful oppression. We were shocked by the clumsy way he handed over the top secret documents. We heard why Hall ceased spying for the Russians. And we learned why Hall entirely escaped prosecution and ended up doing biophysics research at Cambridge University. But the other Russian spies — Klaus Fuchs, David Greenglass, the Rosenbergs and others – were arrested, tried and, in the case of the Rosenbergs, executed.
At the end of this fascinating history lesson, Rolls asked the audience, “Do you think Ted Hall did the right thing by giving the bomb to the Russians?” A tough question to answer after hearing the story THE KID WAS A SPY.
https://apt613.ca/fringe-2024-review-the-kid-was-a-spy/
Jem Rolls came highly recommended to this first-time Canadian Fringe-er. He did not disappoint. Thoughtful, precise, poetic storytelling that teaches. The rhythms were so impressive. His pacing makes for an incredible soundtrack. I could hear the marching of war, battles, impending danger…such delicious prosody!
He challenges his audience and makes us question. Bravo!
Riveting story presented with passion, poetry and panache. The time flew by! Fantastic performance – Thank you!