In the movie adaptation of the Pulitzer Prize winning play, Gwyneth Paltrow plays the daughter of a brilliant and insane John Nash-like mathematician (Anthony Hopkins) who worries about which of her father's attributes she inherited, while handsome young U. of Chicago math prof Jake Gyllenhaal tries to get her to notice him. From my review in the upcoming American Conservative:
Tom  Stoppard's Arcadia, an affectionate romp through the mathematics of chaos  theory, and his Hapgood, an inexplicable explication of quantum  mechanics, are the masterpiece and failure, respectively, of the theatre's  recent interest in scholars. Other examples include Michael Frayn's Copenhagen,  Margaret Edson's Wit, and David Auburn's Proof, a drama about  mathematicians that ran for 900 performances on Broadway, a street not  previously known for its math-friendliness.
Some critics have derided Proof as "middlebrow" for showing few  of the formulas that obsess the main characters. In reality,  "middlebrow" is a compliment, since it means a script pitched well  above the contemporary average. In the admirable middlebrow tradition, Proof  displays a healthy respect for mathematicians and an informative interest in  those aspects of their careers that we can comprehend, such as their fear of  losing their creativity before they hit 30...
The film version of "Proof," fortunately, is largely lacking in the  feminist resentment that has been focused on college math departments since last  winter's Larry Summers brouhaha (for instance, all 30 full professors at the U.  of Chicago are male). As Gyllenhaal's lovelorn character makes clear, there's  nothing the men of mathematics would like more than for beautiful young women to  share their passion.
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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