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The Lightest Element

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Boston, 1956. Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin, one of the most eminent astronomers of the twentieth century, is about to be appointed Chair of Astronomy and the first woman to head a department at Harvard...
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  • 26 August 2025
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Boston, 1956. Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin, one of the most eminent astronomers of the twentieth century, is about to be appointed Chair of Astronomy and the first woman to head a department at Harvard University. Only two things stand in her way: a covert investigation aimed at exposing her as a Communist sympathiser, and the entrenched conservatism of her male colleagues.

When a student journalist asks to profile her, it feels like an opportunity to control her own narrative – assuming, of course, that the invitation is actually what it seems…

Stella Feehily's play The Lightest Element is a taut drama exploring how a challenge to social norms can be almost as difficult as overturning scientific orthodoxy. It premiered at Hampstead Theatre, London, in 2024, directed by Alice Hamilton.
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Price: $22.95
Pages: 80
Publisher: Theatre Communications Group
Imprint: Nick Hern Books
Publication Date: 26 August 2025
Trim Size: 7.75 X 5.00 in
ISBN: 9781839043758
Format: Paperback
BISACs: DRAMA / General, DRAMA / Women Authors, DRAMA / Type / Historical
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'Fascinating... a mind-expanding bio-drama... Feehily captures well the way that while looking at the stars, earthbound envies and career-battles can prevail... stars gleam in the firmament, an eclipse takes place and our grasp of the universe expands as a determined woman pushes at the horizons' —Telegraph

'An entertaining tribute to a trailblazing astronomer expected to make the tea' —Guardian

'An electrifying true story' —The Times

'A starry drama... gripping... Feehily raises great questions about the impact of prejudice and personal interest on progress... richly enjoyable' —Financial Times

'Riveting... Feehily elegantly draws the casually sexist landscape that [her female characters] are navigating... fascinating and enraging... has a lasting slow burn' —Observer

'Fascinating and meticulously researched' —Time Out

'Exhilarating... a humdinger... It's grippingly done, with a gloriously comic, cruelly enraging sequence' —TheatreCat
Stella Feehily is an Irish playwright and actor. She was co-winner of the 2007 Susan Smith Blackburn Award for O Go My Man (Royal Court Theatre & Out of Joint, 2006).

Her other plays include: This May Hurt A Bit (Out of Joint & Octagon Theatre, 2014); Bang Bang Bang (Out of Joint & Octagon Theatre, 2011); Dreams of Violence (Soho Theatre & Out of Joint, 2009); and Duck (Out of Joint, 2003).