The Physics for Poets Club (one act)

This is the original one act which was revised as a full length available here: https://newplayexchange.org/plays/3140717/physics-poets-club
The NEW one act is currently under revision. Writing is a process. Ask any playwright if their play is "finished"! Nope. So, open to productions, feedback etc. Reach out if you're curious, want to follow along with my progress on this one.

60 minute One Act For Zoom or...

This is the original one act which was revised as a full length available here: https://newplayexchange.org/plays/3140717/physics-poets-club
The NEW one act is currently under revision. Writing is a process. Ask any playwright if their play is "finished"! Nope. So, open to productions, feedback etc. Reach out if you're curious, want to follow along with my progress on this one.

60 minute One Act For Zoom or Stage--Four teenage girls serving a detention for various misdemeanors discover that "we don't live in a clockwork universe, it's always breaking down." But as Voltaire's lover Emilie du Châtelet believed, it is the "best of all possible worlds." By exploring the lives of the female scientists, mathematicians and intellectuals of the Enlightenment and early Romantic period: Emilie du Châtelet, Mary Somerville, Nicole-Reine Lepaute, Sophie Germain, Mary Anning, Caroline Herschel, Ada Lovelace and Lady Mary Montagu, the four girls come to a better understanding of themselves and their potential in the modern world.

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The Physics for Poets Club (one act)

Recommended by

  • Alaina Tennant: The Physics for Poets Club (one act)

    "The Physics for Poets Club" is like an introduction to all those women on the posters my math teacher put up on the whiteboard. To me, that poster was the most interesting part of the class. A lot of times, historians and teachers like to pretend that women never longed to be more than they were allowed to be. We grew up thinking that science and math were historically inaccessible interests to girls. So, women grew up to resent such topics. Nora Louise Syran reminds us that that was not the case - never has been and never will be.

    "The Physics for Poets Club" is like an introduction to all those women on the posters my math teacher put up on the whiteboard. To me, that poster was the most interesting part of the class. A lot of times, historians and teachers like to pretend that women never longed to be more than they were allowed to be. We grew up thinking that science and math were historically inaccessible interests to girls. So, women grew up to resent such topics. Nora Louise Syran reminds us that that was not the case - never has been and never will be.

  • Kim E. Ruyle: The Physics for Poets Club (one act)

    Like Gunderson’s Silent Sky, Nora Louise Syran explores the contribution of females to science, but rather than focusing on one person, The Physics for Poets Club gives us a throng of heretofore largely unrecognized women who should be widely celebrated for their scientific prowess. I loved the incorporation of historical vignettes and the dynamics of the four girls in detention. Highly recommended.

    Like Gunderson’s Silent Sky, Nora Louise Syran explores the contribution of females to science, but rather than focusing on one person, The Physics for Poets Club gives us a throng of heretofore largely unrecognized women who should be widely celebrated for their scientific prowess. I loved the incorporation of historical vignettes and the dynamics of the four girls in detention. Highly recommended.

  • Morey Norkin: The Physics for Poets Club (one act)

    I have to admit my ignorance of most of the female historical figures presented in this outstanding piece, largely because they weren’t taught when I was a student, their contributions to the sciences were not recognized, or their contributions were misappropriated by their male counterparts. Nora Louise Syran provides valuable lessons as four teenage girls in detention are required to write about women from the Enlightenment. As their research progresses, history comes to life. And we are all the more wiser and better off for it!

    I have to admit my ignorance of most of the female historical figures presented in this outstanding piece, largely because they weren’t taught when I was a student, their contributions to the sciences were not recognized, or their contributions were misappropriated by their male counterparts. Nora Louise Syran provides valuable lessons as four teenage girls in detention are required to write about women from the Enlightenment. As their research progresses, history comes to life. And we are all the more wiser and better off for it!

View all 5 recommendations
Ensemble Cast: 11-32 roles

Suggested casting for
9F,2M,1F/M

Female 1: (modern teenager) Enya, (historical) Mary Anning

Female 2: (modern teenager) Iris

Female 3: (modern teenager) Jade

Female 4: (modern teenager) Brook

Male/Female 5: (40-50s) Mr/Ms Winthrop (to be played by an historical character below)

Female 6: (14-18)Sophie Germain (30s) Mary Somerville

Female 7: (30s) Emilie du Chatelet, (20s) Oldest Germain Sister (Marie-Madeline), (30-40s) Lady Byron

Female 8: (20-30s) Marie de Thil, Nicole-Reine Lepaute*, Frau Herschel (40s), Miss Ogelvie

Female 9: (30-40s) Mme de Crequi, (20-30s) Mlle Goulier, () Youngest Germain Sister (Angelique-Ambroise), (18) Ada Lovelace

Female 10: (30-40s) Mme Germain, (30s-40s) Mme du Deffand, (20-30) Caroline Herschel, (30s)Lady Montagu

Male 1: (30s) Head Guard, Alexis Clairaut, William Herschel, (40s) Charles Babbage

Male 2: (30-40) Voltaire, (30-40) Monsieur Germain, (30-40) Jerome Lalande, (20-30) Joseph Anning, (40-50) Mr Nasmyth

*non speaking

Production History

  • Type High School, Organization Centre International de Valbonne (ASEICA), Year 2021