Reservations are strongly encouraged and can be made by calling 84 or by visiting. The show will then move to the University of Chicago, where it will be held April 20 through 29 at 7:30 p.m. on Sundays in Lecture Room 2 of the Technological Institute, 2145 Sheridan Road, on the Evanston campus. Performances will be held March 30 through April 15 at 7:30 p.m. We wanted to celebrate ETOPiA’s 10th anniversary with something special, and this play is near and dear to our hearts.” Matthew Grayson This month three actors - including a Northwestern University engineering professor - will explore that mysterious conversation, which took place as Nazis and Allies raced to build the atomic bomb, when “Copenhagen” hits the stage at Northwestern and the University of Chicago. But why he visited or what the two physicists discussed has been a source of controversy ever since. Margrethe Bohr’s question rings at the heart of Michael Frayn’s 1998 Tony Award-winning play “Copenhagen.” No one disputes that German nuclear physicist Werner Heisenberg visited Bohr’s husband Niels on a September night in the middle of World War II. EVANSTON - “Why did he come to Copenhagen?”
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