Synopsis
Life X 3
Yasmina Reza trans Christopher Hampton
Published by Dramatists Play Service
2 Male 2 Female
About to publish the results of two years' research on the flatness of galaxy halos, he's desperate to make a good impression on the distinguished astrophysicist Hubert Finidori, who wields a decisive influence over the question of Henry's longed-for promotion
So when Hubert arrives with his rebellious wife, Inez, in tow for dinner on the wrong night, the fact that there is no food in the apartment (merely an ample supply of Sancerre) is only one of the potentially disastrous elements in play
Add to this Hubert's often brutal treatment of Inez; his lust for Sonia; Inez's weak head for alcohol; Henry's discovery that rival scientists may have beaten him to the punch and Sonia's equivocal feeling of attraction towards Hubert
Along with the entirely unpredictable behavior of the invisible Arnaud - and the stage is set for a catastrophic unraveling of normal civilized behavior. But will it be this kind of catastrophe? Or that? Or, perhaps, worse still, will catastrophe be averted altogether?
Yasmina Reza's Life X 3, as witty and acerbic as 'Art', her enormous worldwide success, contrasts man's ability to analyze and map the outermost reaches of the universe with his total inability to respond rationally to the most trivial domestic mishap, and examines how the slightest random event can effortlessly derail the most elaborately laid plan
An original, hilarious and ultimately thought-provoking addition to an increasingly impressive body of work from one of the most fascinating and distinctive voices of the contemporary theatre
" elegantly streaked with troubling shadows and shaped with Cartesian symme-try" ~ NY Times
"Yasmina Reza's new play is an elegant enigma as an intellectual construct, the play is fascinating" ~ Guardian (London)
"Minimally, millennially chic Life X 3 is swift, sharply phrased, poised and awash with uncertainty" ~ Observer (London)
"[An] extraordinary play The writing is brisk, brittle, funny and lethally accurate" ~ Sunday Times (London)