Either Richard Wiseman, the psychologist, or Simon Singh, the
physicist,
broadcaster and author, will risk his life inside a
coffin-shaped metal cage
on each night of Theatre of Science, which opens on July 4 for
nine
performances at the Soho Theatre in London.
At the climax of the show, the audience will vote on which
scientist they
want to see restrained inside the cage, which will then be
struck by at least a million volts of electricity - easily
enough to kill a person.
But Professor Wiseman and Dr Singh should be perfectly safe:
the device,
known as a Faraday cage, after the 19th-century inventor who
came up with
the idea, is designed so that the current will pass around the
body of
anyone inside it. However, if either man were to stretch a
finger outside
the confines of the cage, he would be in mortal danger and the
bolt would
deliver a lethal shock in the same fashion as an electric
chair. The
restraints which will be on display are, therefore, used not
only to add a
Houdini-like thrill to the spectacle, but also to stop the
scientists from
harming themselves.
Professor Wiseman, of the University of Hertfordshire, had
originally wanted
to recruit a volunteer from the audience for the stunt but was
refused
permission by Westminster Council, the theatre managers and
his insurers.
"I was barely halfway through the sentence when they started
saying, 'Don't
even think about it'," he said. "So we decided that Simon and
I would have
to be the guineapigs instead."
The electricity for the stunt will come from two large Tesla
coils, a pair
of transformers that slowly build up a charge before creating
crackling
bolts of lightning.
The coils will be used elsewhere in the show, but the
performers have been
banned from switching them on for more than 20 seconds because
of the noise
and light.
The audience and performers will be just beyond the maximum
range that the
bolts can reach - the precise details are not being released
to add to the
suspense - and earth wires will be placed on the ceiling to
guard against an
upward strike.
"Everybody will be outside the strike range - but not very far
outside it,"
Professor Wiseman said. "That's why we have had to get £12
million insurance
cover. God, I hope we don't have to claim on it."
The show is not suitable for those aged under 16 or for anyone
using a
pacemaker.
Theatre of Science runs at the Soho Theatre on July 4-6, 11-14
and 18-19.
Tickets are £12/£10 concessions, and are available on 0870
4296883 or
http://www.sohotheatre.com/
ELECTRIFYING PERFORMERS
Humphry Davy: the scientist who invented the miner's safety
lamp also
experimented publicly with nitrous oxide, better known as
laughing gas,
demonstrating its intoxicating effects
Michael Faraday: Davy's former assistant at the Royal
Institution built the
Faraday cage, coated with metal foil, and exposed it to bolts
of
electricity. He used instruments to show there was no excess
charge inside
the cage
Harry Houdini: his most famous trick was the Chinese Water
Torture Cell, in
which he was suspended upside-down in a locked glass-and-steel
cabinet full
of water
Walford Bodie: nicknamed the Electrical Wizard of the North,
Bodie passed
electricity through his body. He used only static electricity,
which looked
impressive but was harmless