Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - November 13, 2025, Winnipeg, Manitoba
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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2025
ARTS ● LIFE I ENTERTAINMENT
Two-hander
playing game
of clones
E
VEN though the play premièred in 2002, starring
Daniel Craig and the late Michael Gambon, Royal
Manitoba Theatre Centre’s version of the cloning
thriller A Number is an original copy.
That’s by Caryl Churchill’s design. Aside from upholding
the interlacing dialogue between a father (Victor Ertman-
is) and his son (Rodrigo Beilfuss), the Obie-winning play-
wright leaves the rest up to interpretation. Though each
successive production shares the same script, Churchill’s
complete eschewal of stage direction and design notes al-
lows for individuated artistic mutations: no two snowflakes
are alike.
“All she tells us is, ‘Here are the characters,’ their ages
and that the whole play takes place in the father’s home,”
says Beilfuss, who, as the artistic director of Shakespeare
in the Ruins, is accustomed to more clearly delineated
instructions. “But that’s it — we get to come up with
everything else. Could they be drinking in the scene? Does
the father use a cane? Could one of the sons be wearing a
baseball cap?
“Basically, we’re creating this play, our own version of it,
our own world.”
The template for that world was established by Churchill
after the birth of Dolly the sheep, who was successfully
cloned by fusing mammary cells from a Finn-Dorset ewe
with an enucleated egg cell.
Decades after Nobel-winning British scientist Sir John
Gurdon, who died on Oct. 7 at 92, carried out a similar
experiment with frogs, leading to the healthy development
of a cloned tadpole, Dolly’s emergence captured the public
imagination.
For Churchill, the realized potential of large-species
cloning offered an ideal gateway toward the exploration of
personality as endowed through both nature and nurture
through the conversational prism of parent and child (and
child) ((and child)).
In the years since Dolly’s death in 2003, cloning hasn’t
gone away. Earlier this month, in a news release issued by
genetics firm Colossal Biosciences, former NFL quarter-
back Tom Brady (and Colossal investor) announced that
the dog he’s been walking since his retirement from the
gridiron was the furthest thing from a shelter rescue:
Junie is a clone of Lua, a pitbull mix who died in 2023,
produced using the same proprietary technology that
introduced Dolly in 1997.
Other clients who’ve kept their old dog using these new
tricks include socialite Paris Hilton and singer-actor Bar-
bra Streisand.
“I was so devastated by the loss of my dear Samantha,
after 14 years together, that I just wanted to keep her with
me in some way,” Streisand wrote in the New York Times
in 2018. “It was easier to let Sammie go if I knew I could
keep some part of her alive, something that came from her
DNA.”
Meanwhile, the surging development of artificial
intelligence predicts a new type of digital cloning: actors
Michael Caine and Matthew McConaughey have signed
deals with New York’s ElevenLabs to officially license
their voices for AI-generated uses, the Guardian reported
Tuesday.
“For years, I’ve lent my voice to stories that moved
people — tales of courage, of wit, of the human spirit,” the
92-year-old Caine said in a statement. “Now, I’m helping
others find theirs. With ElevenLabs, we can preserve and
share voices — not just mine, but anyone’s.”
Churchill’s play, says Beilfuss, is being shared in an
uncanny present where these realities are no longer quite
as far-fetched. And even if cloning your elderly dog isn’t
in your financial cards (the procedure Brady paid for
costs upwards of $50,000), or AI deepfakes give you the
heebie-jeebies, the play still opens up potent conversations
about choice, sibling rivalry and the all-powerful allure of
the scot-free do-over.
“It’s a psychological thriller about cloning, but really,
it’s an intimate chamber piece about parenting, about love
and second chances,” Beilfuss says. “All of us would love
second chances in our lives and all of us have regrets.
“If you don’t have regrets, you really have not assessed
your life.”
ben.waldman@freepress.mb.ca
BEN WALDMAN
THEATRE PREVIEW
A NUMBER
By Caryl Churchill
● Tom Hendry Warehouse Theatre, 240 Rupert Ave.
● Opens tonight, runs to Nov. 29
● Tickets at royalmtc.ca
MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS
A Number’s open-ended stage and design directions put character control in the hands of actor Rodrigo Beilfuss and his co-star, Victor Ertmanis (not shown).
MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS
Rodrigo Beilfuss plays Bernard in cloning thriller A Number.
Space to explore. Stories to inspire.
humanrights.ca
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