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Average rating4.1
David Auburn's Proof won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama and was adapted to film by director John Madden, starring Gwyneth Paltrow, Anthony Hopkins, and Jake Gyllenhaal.
One of the most acclaimed plays of its time, Proof is a work that explores the unknowability of love as much as it does the mysteries of science.
It focuses on Catherine, a young woman who has spent years caring for her father, Robert, a brilliant mathematician in his youth who was later unable to function without her help. His death has brought into her midst both her sister, Claire, who wants to take Catherine back to New York with her, and Hal, a former student of Catherine's father who hopes to find some hint of Robert's genius among his incoherent scribblings. The passion that Hal feels for math both moves and angers Catherine, who, in her exhaustion, is torn between missing her father and resenting the great sacrifices she made for him. For Catherine has inherited at least a part of her father's brilliance―and perhaps some of his instability as well. As she and Hal become attracted to each other, they push at the edges of each other's knowledge, considering not only the unpredictability of genius but also the human instinct toward love and trust.
Reviews with the most likes.
accidentally read this today. picked it up and read the first scene without realizing i had, and then the first act was done, and soon I was on the last page. That hasn't happened with a book for a while, so perhaps I need to read more plays.
Did not know I had gotten a play about math when I started. But it's also about learned helplessness and how exhausting it is to not be understood. Enjoyed it even though I have no idea what the math conversations are about.
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