Times Colonist

Einstein’s personal life revealed in mini-series

- LYNN ELBER

LOS ANGELES — The unparallel­ed brilliance and puckish wit? Check. The trademark wild mop of hair? Check. The marital infidelity and free-wheeling sex?

Yes, check again for Albert Einstein, who in National Geographic’s mini-series Genius comes across as a full-blooded, hot-blooded figure who lived by his own rules, both scientific and domestic.

The 10-part series, starring Oscar-winning Geoffrey Rush (Shine) as the mature physicist and Johnny Flynn (Lovesick) as the budding one, also places Einstein firmly in a 20th-century world engulfed by political chaos and war.

Genius, airing at 9 p.m. Tuesdays, is both entertaini­ng and intelligen­t, as befits a drama that’s based on Walter Isaacson’s acclaimed 2007 biography, Einstein: His Life and Universe, and is the Nat Geo channel’s first scripted series.

Also credit Ron Howard, who brought another complex scientist to the screen in A Beautiful Mind, the 2001 Academy Award-winning film about troubled mathematic­ian John Nash.

There are some Mind-type cinematic flourishes in Genius, restrained special effects that provide a visual sense of Einstein’s thinking and the universe as he sees it and are helpful for the science-challenged.

Genius hopscotche­s through time as it follows Einstein flailing as an unconventi­onal student; a young lover and imperfect husband and parent; a Jew clashing with the German scientific establishm­ent, and as the conflicted father of the atomic age.

Rush said he was more familiar with aspects of Einstein’s worldchang­ing theory of relativity than with the man himself, a distant figure often reduced to a beaming, wild-haired figure with brains.

“We all know the look of Einstein — it should be an emoji,” Rush said by phone from Australia. As he delved further into Einstein’s life, Rush was struck by his many sides and the fame he achieved for work unknowable by many.

“He experience­d a level of global celebrity equal to that of his contempora­ry, Charlie Chaplin,” Rush said.

But while Chaplin’s Little Tramp film character had an everyman appeal, Einstein “managed that by coming up with theories that 99.9 per cent of the world had no idea what he was talking about.”

Not all were fans. Einstein was seen as a threat by, among others, fellow German scientists who derided his work as a sign of foreign influence and “devoid” of reality in the changing political order destined to be ruled by Adolf Hitler.

There are parallels with today’s clashes over climate change and other science, Howard said.

“This sort of tactic of trying to galvanize support around a particular agenda by narrowing your focus, as opposed to broadening it, by doubting innovation and trying to rigidly hang on to accepted ideas, there’s nothing new in that,” he said.

Howard wants viewers to appreciate the courage it took the trailblazi­ng Einstein to pursue his ideas against fierce opposition and, despite his own sometimes “less than noble” personal behaviour, become a voice for shared humanity.

“There’s a kind of courage required for Einstein to have given us everything he gave us, in addition to the transforma­tive work in physics. The role that he ultimately took on as a philosophe­r and political force,” Howard said, “that was not something he welcomed at all. It was thrust upon him.”

 ?? DUSAN MARTINCEK ?? Geoffrey Rush stars as Albert Einstein in Genius, National Geographic’s mini-series.
DUSAN MARTINCEK Geoffrey Rush stars as Albert Einstein in Genius, National Geographic’s mini-series.

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