Capek drama that gave us the word “robot”

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Possible Answers:

RUR.

Last seen on: Wall Street Journal Crossword – October 29 2019 – That Sinking Feeling

Random information on the term “RUR”:

Eric was the first British robot, built in 1928 by First World War veteran Captain William Richards, and aircraft engineer Alan Reffell. He was constructed to open the Exhibition of the Society of Model Engineers at London’s Royal Horticultural Hall in 1928, after George VI (then the Duke of York) cancelled and an exasperated Richards, the exhibition’s secretary, offered to “make a man of tin” to take the Duke’s place. At the event’s opening, Eric rose to his feet, bowed and gave a four-minute opening address.

The robot was operated by two people,and Eric’s voice was received live by a radio signal, Richards claiming to be working under a license of the Marconi Company. Although able to sit and stand, Eric could not move his legs to walk. His chest bore the letters “R.U.R.”, a reference to the robot manufacturer in Karel Čapek’s 1920 play of the same name.

Following his first appearance, Eric was taken on a US tour, introducing himself to an audience in New York in 1929 as “Eric the robot, the man without a soul”. The New York Press described him as “the perfect man”. Some time after this, Eric disappeared. Having researched Eric’s story, Science Museum curator Ben Russell concluded that “no-one quite knows what happened to him, whether he was blown-up or taken to pieces for spare parts”.

RUR on Wikipedia