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Ann Arbor 200

Last Summer - A New One-Act Play by Jim Ottaviani

Year
2024
Poster for Last Summer by Jim Ottaviani

The University of Michigan Summer Symposium in Theoretical Physics brought great minds from all over the world to Ann Arbor for 15 years between WWI and WWII. One evening in 1939, Enrico Fermi tried to convince his friend Werner Heisenberg not to return to Germany, where he would certainly be compelled to help the Nazis develop nuclear weapons.

Last Summer is a new one-act play about this pivotal conversation, based on the physicists' own writings, written for the stage by award-winning science comics writer Jim Ottaviani, and produced in partnership with the Ann Arbor Civic Theatre.


"Thank you to the Ann Arbor District Library’s Eli Neiburger and Andrew MacLaren for inviting me to participate in AADL’s Ann Arbor 200 celebration. I’m grateful to Loey Jones-Perpich and Al Sjoerdsma for their helpful, smart notes on early versions of the script. The Bentley Historical Library provided access to examples of the University’s original Summer Session booklets, which promised visiting scientists that they would be 'materially assisted by its technical staff, consisting of five full-time shop men, a full-time glass blower, apparatus men, a clerk, and a librarian.'" —Jim Ottaviani, November 2024



Original Script


Recording of Premiere Performance


Program

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Media

Premiere Performance of Last Summer - A New One-Act Play by Jim Ottaviani

The University of Michigan Summer Symposium in Theoretical Physics brought great minds from all over the world to Ann Arbor for 15 years between WWI and WWII. One evening in 1939, Enrico Fermi tried to convince his friend Werner Heisenberg not to return to Germany, where he would certainly be compelled to help the Nazis develop nuclear weapons.

Last Summer is a new one-act play about this pivotal conversation, based on the physicists' own writings, written for the stage by award-winning science comics writer Jim Ottaviani, and produced in partnership with the Ann Arbor Civic Theatre.

Script for Last Summer - A New One-Act Play by Jim Ottaviani

Year
2024
Ann Arbor 200
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Media

AAPI Washtenaw Oral History Project - Cynthia Yao

Photo of a Chinese American woman with gray hair and glassesCynthia Yao was born in Kingston, Jamaica, where her parents settled after immigrating from China. In 1959, she moved to Boston to attend Emmanuel College. She met Edward York-Peng Yao who was at Harvard finishing his PhD in Physics. They married and came to Ann Arbor where they raised four children: Michelle, Mark, Steven and Lisa. She received a Master of Museum Practice from the University of Michigan in 1979. She was inspired by science centers and children's museums that she visited with her children. Yao proposed to the city a museum in the former firehouse building and worked with many community members to create the Ann Arbor Hands-On Museum which opened on October 13, 1982. She served as Executive Director for 18 years. 

Note: Cynthia and Ed’s eldest daughter Michelle passed away in 2022, after the recording of this interview. All four of their children have successful careers–three became doctors, and one became an engineer.

View historical materials.

Community High Students Learn the Physics Of Accident Investigation With The Ann Arbor Police Department, November 1994 Photographer: William Jordan

Community High Students Learn the Physics Of Accident Investigation With The Ann Arbor Police Department, November 1994 image
Year:
1994
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, November 4, 1994
Caption:
Community High School physics students stand back a safe distance as an Ann Arbor police officer lays a patch on North Division Street in front of the school.