A Young Man Is Killed

with the ÉCOLE DE LA COMÉDIE DE SAINT-ÉTIENNE

by Christophe Honoré

  • Drama schools at the Festival
  • Show
The 2012 archive

Robert Cantarella

Un jeune se tue © Christophe Raynaud de Lage / Festival d'Avignon

Presentation

The starting point of Christophe Honoré's play, a country road, a summer's night. A flipped-over car, just after an accident, a moment of silence and smoke. And to enliven this image-action, bodies of provincial youth that struggle, fight against boredom, ghosts, predetermined destines. Bodies at war but a private war. A Young Man Is Killed makes reference to performance forms of our time, that is, cinema, but also fragmented narratives in literature, contemporary theatre, performance, dance, and all these while preserving the fable and history. Christophe Honoré wrote A Young Man Is Killed for Robert Cantarella to have the third-year students deal with the creation of a text. For this initiatory test, they will have to take on a universe, a fiction and an incarnation that will permit them to enter professional life.

Directed by Arnaud Meunier, the École de la Comédie de Saint-Étienne is the oldest school in a national dramatic centre. With the purpose of training interpreters, it will celebrate its 30th anniversary in September 2012.

Distribution

Thrid year students of the École de la Comédie de Saint-Étienne
direction Robert Cantarella
scenography Jacques Mollon lighting Katell Djian
music Alexandre Meyer

with Katell Daunis, Clémentine Desgranges, Kathleen Dol, Arthur Fourcade, François Gorrissen, Maud Lefebvre, Lucile Paysant, René Turquois, Béatrice Venet

 

Production

production École de la Comédie de Saint-Étienne
with the support of the Comédie de Saint-Étienne Centre dramatique national,
the DRAC Ministry of Culture and Communication, the Région Rhône-Alpes, the town of Saint-Étienne and R&C

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