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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Technology

Alan Ayckbourn was ahead of the curve in predictions of AI-created TV soaps

A man in a boiler suit with a computer tablet in his right hand, apparently a technician, has his hand at the back of a woman with pink hair in a bob style and wearing a pink uniform with a logo saying
A scene from Alan Ayckbourn’s 2023 play Constant Companions, which revisits the robot theme of his 1998 drama Comic Potential, says Yvonne Whalley. Photograph: Tony Bartholomew

So, the TV director James Hawes has told parliament’s culture, media, and sport committee that within three to five years, soaps will be created by artificial intelligence (TV soaps could be made by AI within three years, director warns, 22 February). He is, of course, not the first to make this prediction. Alan Ayckbourn’s Comic Potential, first performed at the Stephen Joseph theatre in Scarborough in 1998, is a case in point. He foresaw a time when soaps would be routinely performed by robots, some so old and fault-ridden that performances rarely went smoothly, or even coherently. Ayckbourn revisited the robot theme in his 2023 play Constant Companions, fully AI this time. The outlook for humans in this is not bright. Indeed, Ayckbourn’s crystal ball has a habit of seeing possible future trends and issues with alarming prescience. Rarely comforting.
Yvonne Whalley
Sherburn in Elmet, North Yorkshire

• Re Olivier’s Othello (Letters, 19 February), who can forget Donald Sinden’s performance in 1979. I can still hear the laughter.
Mike Peacock
East Meon, Hampshire

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