Review: The Lightest Element, at Hampstead Theatre

Stars and sexism as historical drama explores the career of British astronomer and astrophysicist Cecilia Payne

Thursday, 19th September 2024 — By Lucy Popescu

The Lightest Element_credit Mark Douet

[Mark Douet]

IN 1925 British astronomer and astrophysicist Cecilia Payne (Maureen Beattie) claimed that the stars are made of hydrogen and helium. Her PhD adviser, Henry Norris Russell (Julian Wadham), head of Princeton Observatory, disagreed. Four years later he reached the same conclusion.

Stella Feehily’s historical drama explores Cecilia’s career over five decades and the prejudices of the time. In 1956, Cecilia is one of the world’s most eminent astronomers. But she has to surmount attempts to expose her as a communist sympathiser, and the sexism of her male colleagues.

When student journalist, Sally Kane (Annie Kingsnorth), requests an interview, Cecilia assumes it is an opportunity raise her profile. But Sally has been coerced by her boyfriend (Steffan Cennydd) to discover whether Cecilia and her husband should be reported to the House Un-American Activities Committee.

This is the main tension of Feehily’s drama, slickly directed by Hampstead stalwart Alice Hamilton.

It’s fascinating stuff, and Beattie gives an engaging performance.

But while I sympathised with Cecilia’s tribulations as a female pioneer in a patriarchal world, I didn’t get to know her well enough to truly care about her struggle.

Until October 12
hampsteadtheatre.com/

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