The play explores themes of artistic legacy, grief, authenticity, and ambition. As the Novellos peel back the layers of myth and manipulation surrounding the Requiem's completion, they confront shifting narratives, personal agendas, and their own need for meaning in the wake of loss. At its core, the play dramatizes the tension between public preservation and private mourning, and the ways in which the past can be reassembled--or obscured--by those left behind.
Combining historical fact with fictionalized introspection, Gollob's script is richly textured with philosophical dialogue, period detail, and dramatic confrontation. In the end, the search for the "real" Mozart becomes inseparable from the Novellos' own need for remembrance, redemption, and relevance. The final scenes and epilogue poignantly blur the boundary between memory and presence, fact and feeling, leaving the audience with haunting questions about legacy, love, and the price of truth.