The Doctor, Almeida theatre: chilling power from Juliet Stevenson

Juliet Stevenson and Joy Richardson in The Doctor
Juliet Stevenson and Joy Richardson in The Doctor
(Image credit: Manuel Harlan)

There’s been no shortage of productions over the past couple of years that have taken plays with political themes and brought them up to date, to show how apt they still are in the divided era of Brexit. It’s not an easy task, and one that can sometimes result in a trite or “on the nose” final product. But The Doctor, Robert Icke’s farewell production as associate director of the Almeida theatre, succeeds where many others have failed.

A very loose adaptation of Professor Bernhardi (1912), by the Austrian playwright and doctor Arthur Schnitzler, The Doctor’s plot centres around the same single incident as the original. A Jewish doctor denies a Catholic priest access to a patient who is dying of sepsis following a botched abortion. In Icke’s version, the incident causes a press and social media storm, an online petition and a TV debate, all while tensions between the conflicted staff inside the elite, private hospital edge closer and closer to boiling point.

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