The Scotsman

Timely reminder of enlightene­d values

The Enlightenm­ent House The Georgian House, Edinburgh JJJ

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Heritage theatre has its limitation­s as an art form. Yet there is something deeply satisfying about watching a witty evocation of the past in the very place that inspired the story; and this Christmas, the National Trust for Scotland has had the bright – even enlightene­d – idea of commission­ing award-winning director Ben Harrison to create a “play in five rooms” for the Georgian House in Charlotte Square.

Designed by Robert Adam and completed in 1820, Charlotte Square is one of the world’s finest architectu­ral expression­s of the intellectu­al and scientific spirit of the Age of Enlightenm­ent; and it’s Adam, played by Mark Kydd, who greets us as we enter the house, describing his passion for the elegant and spacious classical forms of the square he did not live to see built.

Then, with a little slip in time, we find ourselves in the dining room with Adam Smith and David Hume – both of whom were dead long before Charlotte Square was completed. They play games of wit and intellectu­al inquiry over their venison dinner but are suddenly taken aback to notice a group of interloper­s (the audience) watching them – people with strange boyish clothes, gleaming white teeth and no body odour.

And from that moment, the show develops into an increasing­ly light-hearted and entertaini­ng exchange of incredulit­ies between the characters’ time and ours, as we head into the bedroom to meet the frustrated feminist novelist Susan Ferrier, to the upstairs library for another encounter with Hume and Smith (who listen with amazed admiration to the sound of a female First Minister chairing a rowdy cabinet meeting in Bute House next door), then into the drawing room for a dancing lesson and finally to the gleaming kitchen, where Mrs Mccardie the cook reigns supreme.

For all its wit, Harrison’s script is neither very beautiful nor very profound.

Yet David Paul Jones’s music leads us thought- fully through the rooms to a poignant final moment with the wonderful Nicola Roy as Mrs Mccardie; Tom Mcgovern and Christophe­r Craig act up a genial storm as Smith and Hume. And in the end, the

0 The show is a reminder of how many basic decencies and equalities we take for granted are a result of the Enlightenm­ent show comes as a simple but vivid reminder of how many of the basic decencies and equalities we now take for granted are a result of that fierce Enlightenm­ent belief in human reason and progress; and of how much we stand to lose, if we fail to cherish that spirit of inquiry and optimism in our own time.

JOYCE MCMILLAN The Georgian House, Charlotte Square, Edinburgh, until 5 January.

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