Performing Arts Festival launching from Tokyo
Following a 3-year hiatus, Hungarian director Árpád Schilling's Krétakör has created the "Crisis Trilogy" (2011), which marks a turning point for this company that up to now has mostly staged classical texts, and is an experiment in approaching real problems through the differing forms of film, opera and theatre.
"The Priestess" is the final part of the trilogy, portraying the repercussions in a rural town shaken by ethnic issues when an actress from the city becomes the local drama teacher. The roles of her students are played by children who participated in workshops in the Romanian district of Transylvania, and who relate their own life experiences in the play.
The performance blends stage action with video of the village where the children reside, mixing fiction and reality to locate the problems in the region: disparities between city and province, the breakdown of values, and the violence and discrimination lurking in daily life. One of the children sits facing the audiences, saying, "What do you think is happening here now?" This direct inquiry is the Krétakör style.
10/27 (Sat) | 19:00 |
---|---|
10/28 (Sun) | 17:00★ |
10/29 (Mon) | 19:00★ |
---|---|
10/30 (Tue) | 14:00 |