Bewitching as ever
Picking up after 19 years from where it left off, Harry Potter and the Cursed Child is the much anticipate and long-awaited sequel to the much beloved and ubiquitous Harry Potter series that ended with the seventh book, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, in 2008. The hiatus of nine years has not diminished the memory of Harry Potter and its beloved characters as noted from the hype the latest book has created. The book in question is in fact a play written by playwright Jack Thorne, with the story conceived by J.K. Rowling, John Tiffany and Jack Thorne.
Written for the British stage, the play debuted in London’s West End this July, coinciding with the release of the script in the form of the book. That said, the story need not be read from a thespian’s perspective. Although written as a play, the format does not detract from the series’ original essence, as key thematic elements of good vs. evil, kindness and courage, remain intact. As a sequel to the original series, it is every bit a continuation, seamlessly transitioning into an independent story while remaining connected to the context and history as much as it takes on its own identity.
Concentrating on the next generation grappling with the aftermath of their parents’ experiences, and the legacy they have all inherited, just as we saw Harry once do, the story zeroes in on Albus Severus, Harry’s eldest son, and his friend Scorpius Malfoy, the son of Draco Malfoy, one of Harry’s nemeses in the series. The story begins at the point Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows ended at — with Harry and Ginny with their three kids at platform 93/4 on their way to drop their second son at Hogwarts. It’s been 19 years since the Battle of Hogwarts, as it is now known in history. For us, it was the conclusive end to the series as we know it, and the story of the boy who lived.
Harry is now working at the Ministry of Magic, with Hermione at its helm as Minister for Magic. The book is still very much about family, as it takes a closer look at the characters’ relationships with their children. Albus resents the pressure his father’s legacy places on him and Harry’s overprotective parenting style, Scorpius resents not being able to live up to his legacy by being a darker, more intimidating version of himself like his father Draco would want. All that is similar between Harry and Albus is that they inherit legacies they did not ask for.
The Harry Potter series is revived with the play Harry Potter and the Cursed Child
As through the course of the series we got used to the various tools and tricks that got Harry Potter and his company in and out of scrapes, we see a particularly nifty device that allows the writers, the readers and audiences to revisit events while hurtling forth into the future. A device similar to the one Hermione had once used in book three, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, a Time-Turner is in question after being recovered from a recalcitrant defector. Much rumoured about and considered extreme contraband within the wizarding world, the device is withheld in the Ministry until they can decide what to do with it. Late one night Harry is paid a visit by the father of Cedric Diggory, the Hogwarts student who was killed by Voldemort during the Triwizard Tournament in book four, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. He was a co-winner along with Harry, thus inadvertently being transported along with him via Portkey (another time-travelling device) to Voldemort. His father demands that Harry use the Ministry’s rumoured device and reverse the course of the future. As Albus witnesses this heated encounter, he is joined by a strange character Delphi, claiming to have accompanied Mr Diggory as his niece and caretaker. Elaborating on the toll this loss had on him, she urges Albus to act. Albus, feeling burdened with the inadvertent aftermath of Harry’s actions, breaks into Hermione’s office with Scorpius to retrieve the device, hoping to go back into the past and set things right by trying to prevent Cedric’s death.
The book transcends the elusive space-time continuum by allowing time travel, giving the story a four-dimensional quality where old characters meet new ones and the past becomes a part of the present, in an attempt to reset a particular event in history.