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Pedro Gonçalves

BELLYFLOP Magazine | Josef Nadj and Akosh S: Les Corbeaux - 0 views

  • The movement and the sound are improvised but create imagery that is strong and draws on the archetypal: there is no wooliness about it, nothing superfluous. Nadj transforms bit by bit, becoming less human, more crow
Pedro Gonçalves

Les Corbeaux (The Crows), ROH - 0 views

  • Les Corbeaux, which was first performed in Switzerland in 2010
Pedro Gonçalves

LES CORBEAUX - SHOWS - EDITION 2010 - ARCHIVE - Festival d'Avignon - 0 views

  • Everything came out of a fortuitous encounter with a Japanese crow. A few years ago, when Josef Nadj was rehearsing a solo on the roof of a theatre in Kyoto, a crow perched not far from him. Out of the glance that the dancer, in full movement, cast on the dark bird, suddenly emerged the idea of a show.
  • It was the excuse for a return to a childhood in Vojvodina, in ex-Yugoslavia where the crow holds an important place
  • The animal of wisdom, a disturbing link with mystery, the symbol of the world's unity, the crow holds the key to the cycle of life and death, the real and the dream, the divine and the diabolical. It was also the pretext for a physiological and behavioural study, involving the imitation of a movement, a gait, a flight, a landing, almost a savoir-faire.
Pedro Gonçalves

FT.com / Arts / Theatre & Dance - Les Corbeaux, Linbury Studio Theatre, London - 0 views

  • Les Corbeaux (The Crows), choreographed by Josef Nadj with music by Akosh S, is an enigmatic piece that draws the audience in through its very quietness and concentration.
  • Les Corbeaux, the pair’s sixth collaboration, is inspired by the countryside of former Yugoslavia
  • with his finely tuned body, Nadj is a master of balance and can teeter on the brink of a pose to great effect. I wanted more, but tantalisingly he rations his dance moves for the sake of conceptual purity.
Pedro Gonçalves

Figuras da Cultura Portuguesa - 0 views

  • Daí que na sua ficção haja uma evidente desvalorização da história (a intriga), como se esta servisse apenas, no seu fragmentarismo e na sua desconexão discursiva ou na sua temporalidade descontínua, para ilustrar simbolicamente as pulsões que se confrontam no “teatro” interior do egocêntrico narrador.
  • em todas as obras do autor é nuclear a oposição reiterada entre o eu social (a máscara) e o eu profundo (o sonho); a imposição do ser para consumo social (o domínio do parecer) e a vertigem do ser autêntico – uma latência obscura apenas revelável socialmente em momentos de crise.
  • A este fascínio ambíguo pela rebelião ou pela centração no drama social dos pobres não seria, de resto, alheio a sua relação simpática com o anarquismo desde a última década do século XIX.
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  • má consciência burguesa atingirá o seu acme com a revolta milenarista de O Pobre de Pedir.
  • a dor e o sonho são, na ficção brandoniana, os únicos vectores que intensificam a vida e lhe dão plenitude.
  • estética do grotesco no autor
Pedro Gonçalves

'Thor,' With Chris Hemsworth - Review - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • there is also Idris Elba covered in gold armor, looking like a cross between the Wall Street bull and an Oscar statuette.
  • the absolute and unbroken mediocrity of “Thor” is evidence of its success. This movie is not distinctively bad, it is axiomatically bad.
  • Thor” is an example of the programmed triumph of commercial calculation over imagination.
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  • Nothing in “Thor” is, and I suspect that is not an accident. If you can’t remember what you saw, then there’s no harm in seeing it again. There is no reason to go to this movie, which might be another way of saying there’s no reason not to. Something like that seems to be the logic behind “Thor,” and as a business plan it’s probably foolproof.
Pedro Gonçalves

"Une Flûte enchantée" de Peter Brook, légère et intense, aux Bouffes du Nord ... - 0 views

  • Décor presque nu, vêtements sobres, chant épuré, la "Flûte enchantée" mise en scène à Paris par Peter Brook, à partir de l'opéra de Mozart, retient l'essence de l'oeuvre pour livrer au public un spectacle à la fois léger et intense
  • "J'ai abandonné l'opéra (...) sur une haine absolue de cette forme figée - non seulement "la forme opéra" mais aussi "les institutions opéra", le "système opéra" qui bloque tout", raconte celui qui, à 85 ans, a décidé de tourner une page en confiant la direction des Bouffes du Nord à Olivier Mantei et Olivier Poubelle.
  • La "Flûte" de Peter Brook, qui dure une heure quarante sans entracte, apparaît bel et bien "débarrassée de toutes les conventions imposées par la forme durant des années".
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  • Quand Papagena, la femme qui va l'aimer, tout d'abord enveloppée d'un long manteau et recroquevillée comme une vieille sorcière, ôte soudain ses oripeaux pour apparaître jeune, vêtue à l'identique de Papageno, le rire est instantané. Clin d'oeil malicieux, elle est le seul personnage à n'être pas pieds nus mais en socquettes roses.
Pedro Gonçalves

Mozart's 'Magic Flute' Gets Skeletal Paris Staging: Review - Bloomberg - 0 views

  • Peter Brook is bowing out with a whimper, not a bang. “A Magic Flute (After Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart),” his new and possibly last production at the Bouffes du Nord in Paris, will appeal only to unconditional fans.
  • Although Brook, 85, has said that he’ll go on directing right up to his last breath, he’s on his way out. He recently handed over management of his theater to a younger team, Olivier Mantei and Olivier Poubelle, and its public subsidies have been slashed.
  • Brook also had directed operas, yet felt frustrated with the genre’s conventions and vowed never again to get involved. In 1983, he broke his pledge and staged “La Tragedie de Carmen,” a condensed 83-minute version of Bizet’s masterpiece with a reduced orchestra and some tampering with the score. The result got mixed reviews. While the New York theater critics welcomed the production, music lovers had misgivings. I belong to the second category.
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  • “A Magic Flute,” though a couple of minutes longer, is even more skeletal. The orchestra is reduced to a piano. That the pianist, Alain Planes, the only known quantity among the participants, jumped ship on the eve of the premiere was a bad omen. Franck Krawczyk, the arranger, had to stand in.
  • The arias are sung in an exotically flavored German. The dialogues are spoken in French. I saw the first of two alternating casts. None of the young singers is on the verge of a major career. The only one worth citing is Leila Benhamza’s Queen of the Night: Her coloraturas are clear, yet the lyrical passages need work. The acting isn’t any better. The general impression is that of a school performance at a provincial conservatory.
Pedro Gonçalves

A Magic Flute - review | Music | The Guardian - 0 views

  • It's the third, and probably the last, in the line of operatic adaptations that Brook and his collaborator Marie-Hélène Estienne have produced for his company at the Théâtre des Bouffes du Nord in Paris, following their versions of Carmen and Pelléas et Mélisande.
  • Like its predecessors, A Magic Flute drastically strips down the original: the whole work, played without a break, is over in 90 minutes, the youthful cast is reduced to seven singers and two actors, and the orchestra replaced by a piano part arranged and played by Franck Krawczyk. The set is a collection of vertical canes, constantly moved into new configurations, there are few props, and the costumes are a mix of western and vaguely oriental.
  • The lack of real context for much of what happens is a distraction, and the rationale for what has been cut and what retained is puzzling.
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  • The aim, Brook says in the programme, is to produce a "light effervescent Flute, where an intimacy with the performers will allow the tenderness and the depth of the score to appear". Yet it's a rather prim and chilly experience, not joyless exactly – the end is an exquisite delight – but detached, uninvolving and played at the same subdued level throughout.
  • The polarity between the moments of pantomime humour and the deep seriousness of the story of Pamina's abduction never strikes sparks.
Pedro Gonçalves

Peter Brook: and for my next trick … | Stage | The Guardian - 0 views

  • In his youth Peter Brook was famed for his pyrotechnic dazzle. "He cooks," wrote Kenneth Tynan in 1953, "with cream, blood and spices: bread-and-water addicts must look elsewhere." But, at 85, Brook is a very different director. Since 1974, when he took over the artistic directorship of the Bouffes du Nord in Paris, his work has been characterised by its clarity, lightness and distilled elegance
  • His 90-minute production of Mozart's A Magic Flute, which comes to the Barbican next week, is quintessential late Brook. Out go the opera's pantomimic spectacle, big processions and trios of boys and ladies. Instead, we have a stage bare except for bamboo poles and minimal props and a young, nine-strong cast who deliver the work – sung in German with dialogue in French – crucially situated in front of Franck Krawczyk at the piano. As Brook wryly says: "If you come to this production looking for something that will slam you in the eyes, you've come to the wrong address."
  • The librettist, Schikaneder, obviously wanted a big, fun popular show with plenty of scenic effects. But he and Mozart were both freemasons and, at a time when the movement was regarded by the Archduke as a potentially subversive political threat, sought to create an opera that is about spiritual trial and initiation. For Mozart, freemasonry represented his intuition that there was something finer and purer in life beyond the material and the everyday."
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  • in Mozart, the music is drawn to the surface by the words."
  • Time is this merciless, corroding force, but you also know that, if you stay with it, it will take you towards the pure essence."
  • for those with ears to hear and eyes to see, A Magic Flute offers not a reduction of Mozart's opera but a beautiful realisation of its inner core.
Pedro Gonçalves

Tarantino's Django Unchained script: The word is out | Film | guardian.co.uk - 0 views

  • Quentin Tarantino, who completed his screenplay for upcoming movie Django Unchained on 26 April and earlier this week woke to discover half the blogosphere had already read it.
  • Django Unchained seems to be an homage to Sergio Leone set in the deep south (rather than the old west) which tackles the predictably difficult subject of 19th-century American slavery. The lead character is a black slave-turned-gunslinger named Django.
  • the film appears to feature a plum role for Christoph Waltz, the Austrian actor whose performance as a dastardly SS colonel in Inglourious Basterds was rewarded with an Oscar last year. The part is that of a German bounty hunter and former dentist named Dr King Schlutz, who teaches Django the art of contract killing before helping him to find his still-enslaved wife.
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  • Tarantino seems to be repeating the same trick he pulled with Inglourious Basterds, which borrowed its moniker from a 1978 Italian war film of (nearly) the same name but ignored pretty much everything else. The original Django is a 1966 spaghetti western, directed by Sergio Corbucci and starring Franco Nero as a ruthless gunman. Nero said he's been given a role in the film, but that may well be the only connection – other than that Tarantino will riff off the genre's tropes in much the same way he cheerfully rifled through the "dogs of war" domain last time around.
  • Reining in Quentin Tarantino would be like telling Jimi Hendrix to quit with the guitar solos – and yet someone might have to do it. Could that be the secret behind the screenplay's bizarre leaking? After all, if you're determined to win an argument, there's nothing like having a bit of backup.
Pedro Gonçalves

Dennis Potter's brutal children | Television & radio | guardian.co.uk - 0 views

  • It is set in the Forest Of Dean in 1943; a place of idyllic summer beauty, marvellously photographed and shot entirely on location, on film, with no studio scenes shot on video
  • A bunch of children are romping around endlessly, aimlessly, with children's inexhaustible fund of energy and ingenuity - playing and fantasising about what their absent dads are doing in the war. They are nasty and bullying, ganging up on the weakest, with constantly shifting allegiances and protocols of sycophancy. They are, in their way, entirely innocent. But it is this which means that they are capable of horrifying acts of cruelty, which seem even more cruel in an age when we are obsessed with children as victims of adult predators.
  • Blue Remembered Hills is of course a little like Golding's Lord Of The Flies, but without the "rescue" ending and without that novel's satirical premise that children would behave like this if the restraint of authority were removed: Potter removes the conditional tense; he says that they do behave like this every day, and that the distinction between childhood and adulthood - that supposed harness of morality and rationality - is far less clear than you think.
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  • Helen Mirren plays Angela
  • The greatest performance is from Colin Jeavons as the horribly put-upon Donald, brutally called "Donald Duck"
  • I don't think I have ever seen in any television drama something as shockingly, explicitly real as Donald's distress after being bullied.
  • He is all alone, hiding in a barn, rocking back and forth, desperately lonely and sobbing to himself "Come back dad... come back dad... ". It is deeply upsetting to watch because we know that in some angry, masochistic way he is saying this to upset himself still further. This scene - one of the most purely violent I've ever seen in any television programme - shows how important it was to cast adults. Seeing an adult cry like a child is shocking, and adult actors can make children's pain brutally and tactlessly real to an audience which wants to forget what being a child was actually like.
  • famous lines from AE Housman's A Shropshire Lad, which Potter himself reads over the final sequence:Into my heart an air that kills From yon far country blows: What are those blue remembered hills, What spires, what farms are those?That is the land of lost content, I see it shining plain, The happy highways where I went And cannot come again.
  • Could it be that in remembering this past you are not debarred from the blue remembered hills, but rather, you are inhabiting them for the very first time - inhabiting them in a fuller, realer way than when you were there as a child? Memory, though conflicted and anguished, affords you a vivid new presence (and it may also be that Potter wants us to superimpose an ironic meaning on "land of lost content" with its "air that kills"). Now you are there, really there, intensely aware as you never were at the time of the ironies, the injustices and the exquisite luxuries of having nothing to do all day.When an adult truly remembers what it was like to be a child, with an adult's perspective, there is something forbidden and almost transgressive about it. That is what, I think, Potter is getting at when he cast adults as children. It wasn't a stunt: it was a representation of the act of memory.
Pedro Gonçalves

In Savage Quarters, a Reign of Sex, Violence and Alliteration - New York Times - 0 views

  • What makes it stand out from the legions of other crime stories is its idiosyncratic language, a propulsive stream of muscular verbs and baroque slang spoken in the first person and present tense. It was almost as if Mr. O'Rowe had studied Samuel Beckett's chiseled prose and Martin McDonagh's outrageous violence and then tried to best them.
  • his staccato poetry, which employs invented words and unusual syntax, has become increasingly sophisticated, abstract and all his own. He writes like someone who is laughing at his own audacity, testing his own alliterative limits ("submission is all he knows, the sissy/Surrender. Self-pity") and playing similar syllable sounds off each other ("kowtowing, cowardly"). If he uses a cliché, he'll make sure to give it a tweak ("days of salad"). Some lines are so rich that they can easily trip up actors.
  • a writer who loves words almost as much as he does dirty jokes and bloody faces. Even bad sex sounds pleasingly musical.
Pedro Gonçalves

A life in theatre: Wallace Shawn, American playwright and actor | Culture | The Guardian - 0 views

  • Speaking of an earlier piece, A Thought in Three Parts, David Hare says that its central section, which dramatises an orgy, "is the only successful piece of pornography in the modern theatre" - stage directions call for 19 orgasms to be shared among four characters - "and it's also sexy and very funny.
  • In Hare's view, Shawn is America's leading contemporary dramatist. "Aunt Dan and Lemon, The Fever and The Designated Mourner - these are the three major American plays of our time."
  • "When we did Our Late Night at the Public Theatre in New York in 1975, people booed." It was the first professional performance of one of his plays. "One night, they started mooing, like cows. People talked during the play, expressing their sense that it was worthless trash." Joseph Papp, the artistic director of the Public, called him "a dangerous writer. A very rare species. He tells people things about themselves that they don't want to know."
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  • Invited to consider the suggestion that the audience might have recoiled from the play's content, which includes descriptions of masturbation, paedophilia and sex with an "enormous woman" who lets out "elephant moans", he responds cheerfully: "Ah, but I thought it was well written! When I was first exposed to the films of Ingmar Bergman, I found them frank and disturbing portraits of the world we live in, but that was not something that displeased me. They were beautiful. I thought people would respond to my plays the way I responded to Bergman's films."
  • In the mid-1980s, the sexual vaudeville of Shawn's early work gave way to political concerns, though the dramatic procedure was the same: just as the lust-filled reveries that occupy a person's private thoughts remain hidden from the world at large, so, in the second act of Shawn's playwriting career, the obscene oppression of the world's poor by rich and powerful nations is covered up by hypocrisy and, if necessary, military force
  • The original production of 1990 was described by Frank Rich, then the resident theatre critic of the New York Times, as "nothing if not a musty, radical chic stunt destined to be parodied". A revival in 2007 prompted the headline in the same paper, "The World's a Mess, and It's All Your Fault". Rich deployed the weapon that is used frequently in attacks on Shawn's plays, calling The Fever "an almost entirely humourless assault on the privileged class by one of its card-carrying members".
  • Shawn, who was educated at private schools before going to Harvard and Oxford, posits a defence based on sincerity. "Being in poor countries was something that changed me more than anything else." He wrote The Fever after visits to Central American states where ruthless dictatorships relied on backing from the US government. "It gave me an insight into the sickness of my own society." The epiphany gave him permission "to devote my life to being a writer". He has an engaging belief in the transforming power of literature.
  • In Hare's view, the reconstruction of Shawn as a political playwright happened as a result of his exposure to British theatre. "Wally came to Britain in the 1970s, and fell under the influence of Howard Brenton, Caryl Churchill and myself. Until then, the main tendency of his work had been surrealist."
  • When A Thought in Three Parts, which incorporates the comic youth hostel orgy, was mounted by Joint Stock at the ICA in 1977, it led to protests from members of parliament and a demand on the part of the Conservative MP for Staffordshire South West for "urgent talks with the Arts Council". There exists a theatrical legend that the play was banned; the reality, though less sensational, is equally dismal. Threatened with the loss of its grant, as Hare recalls, the ICA "decided not to extend the scheduled run, despite sold-out houses".
  • A note at the head of The Fever says that it was "first performed in various apartments in New York City". The performer was the author. It has since been played in many countries, by actors of both genders.
  • "The trouble with theatres is that people are sitting in seats that they have sat in before, to watch other plays. They are settling in for a certain type of experience, bringing with them a lot of preconceptions that start filtering into their brains before the play has even begun." In spaces such as an abandoned men's club building, where The Designated Mourner received its first and only New York staging, "the audience doesn't know what to expect, and is perhaps more willing to meet you halfway."
  • "I have lived in the shadow of my father. It would be ridiculous to pretend that there is no relationship between the sex in my plays and the reticence about sex which my father practised, even carrying it over to his duties as magazine editor. It's almost too obvious to mention. Clearly, I must be in some sort of reaction to that, although" - he does the comic deadpan - "I've taken it awfully far."
  • Grasses of a Thousand Colours is like Shawn's early plays, in being domestic drama of an outlandish kind. Animals don fancy costumes and welcome humans to a party. Cats make satisfying lovers. Husband and wife take pleasure in savaging one another, just as they do in other works by Shawn. Donkeys stand on the table at dinner and "haphazardly piss", while men admire their penises. "Of course it has upsetting elements," Shawn says, looking as if, as was once said, the strongest four-letter word he could utter is "Gosh". He insists that writing "is not a voluntary process.
  • Isn't all writing to some extent about trying to get through the layers of propaganda and false interpretations and received ideas and clichés that prevent us from seeing what's going on? I think that's the enterprise."
Pedro Gonçalves

The Fever - Wallace Shawn - Theater - Review - New York Times - 0 views

  • Mr. Shawn has amusingly chosen to acknowledge this paradox in the new production that opened last night at the Acorn Theater, directed by Scott Elliott for the New Group. The evening begins with a Champagne reception (Pommery, no less) held on the stage a half-hour before showtime. Mr. Shawn can be seen mingling with hoi polloi, the dome of his bald head bobbing genially as he exchanges chitchat with audience members. (At the reviewed performance, not-so-hoi polloi gathering onstage included the novelist William Kennedy, the playwright Tina Howe and the actor Ethan Hawke.)
  • The Fever” offers an intimate tour of the tortured consciousness of an angst-ridden, well-to-do American, but Mr. Shawn’s real goal is to hold an unflattering mirror up to his well-meaning, liberally inclined audience. It’s sort of like Joseph Conrad’s “Heart of Darkness,” with you, dear viewer, cast in the distasteful role of Kurtz.
  • Mr. Shawn’s literary models are more likely Kafka and Dostoyevsky, and at its best, “The Fever” does achieve the hypnotic force of those explorers of the uncanny.
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  • Mr. Shawn exposes the contradictions and compromises of the urban liberal mind with a mercilessness that is sly and at times hilarious.
  • Despite the density and richness of its language, however, “The Fever” doesn’t go very deep in its analysis of the fundamental causes of the world’s inequities or posit any rational ideas about how they could be eased. Mr. Shawn is limited by the scope of the narrator’s experience, of course — an economist or political scientist he is not — but the resulting narrative circles around a few basic conclusions that seem thinner and more obvious the more they are illustrated or simply repeated.
  • “My feeling in my heart a sympathy for the poor does not change the life of the poor,” our narrator unsurprisingly says toward the play’s conclusion. At least Mr. Shawn displays a self-knowledge to match his narrator’s when he has him continue, “And artists who create works of art that inspire sympathy and good values don’t change the life of the poor.”
  • Its simple finger-pointing at the egoism and materialism of the complacent bourgeoisie seems reductive.
  • More to the point, I think Mr. Shawn overestimates his audience’s taste for self-flagellation by a good half-hour. “The Fever” would cut deeper into the consciousness if it were shorter. He should know that a 90-minute monologue gives too much rein for straying thoughts about dinner plans and how best to catch a taxi after the performance. And perhaps — who knows? — a few audience members might put that half-hour to better use, studying or working for gradual improvements in the lives of others rather than lamenting their own egoism over glasses of Champagne.
Pedro Gonçalves

ADÍLIA LOPES - 0 views

  • Eduardo Prado Coelho considera, já o escreveu, que esse seu pseudónimo é “ostensivamente não-poético”.
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