Putting theatre
into Streatham

Streatham’s local
theatre company

Friday 3rd July 8pm

Saturday 4th July 8pm

Saturday 11th July 2pm & 7pm
Doors open 30 minutes earlier

The Studio, Beacon Bingo,
110 Streatham Hill, London, SW2 4RD

Adults £10, Concessions £8

“In the long run, it’s not breaking the code that matters – it’s where you go from there. That’s the real problem.”


Alan Turing was the eccentric genius who helped break the complex German Enigma code, playing a major role in the winning of WW II.

After the war Turing turned his scientific and mathematical genius to the concept of developing an ‘electronic brain’; the first computer.

Meanwhile, in his private life Turing was breaking another code: the taboo of homosexuality. In 1952 he was convicted of the criminal act of gross indecency and sentenced to undergo hormone treatments as part of his rehabilitation.  He committed suicide in 1954.

Following on from the recent film ‘The Imitation Game’, our production  of Hugh Whitemore’s play focuses on Turing the man, his personal moral code, the relationships that influenced his life and his struggle to appreciate the conventions and laws of 1950s society.

Turing received a posthumous Royal Pardon in 2013. There is now a campaign to extend a pardon to homosexuals convicted of similar criminal offences in the past.

BREAKING THE CODE

Alan Mathison Turing

23 June 1912-7 June 1954

by Hugh Whitemore, based on the book
‘Alan Turing: The Enigma’ by Alan Hodges


Breaking the Code logo

An amateur production by arrangement with Samuel French