Nature morte

(Still Life. To the glory of the city)

by Manolis Tsipos

  • Theatre
  • Show
The 2014 archive

Michel Raskine and École de la Comédie de Saint-Étienne

Saint-Étienne / Created in 2014

Nature morte © Christophe Raynaud de Lage

Presentation

In a time we guess to be very close to ours, a city reminiscent of Athens and occupied by a foreign army is the scene of violent events. An anonymous voice calls out to “the citizens,” encourages them to perform various procedures on their own bodies (shaving, castration, sex change, etc.), in a discourse that brings to mind a twisted orthodox liturgy. Wild stage directions regularly show up on stage, turning the world into chaos. Humans, animals, objects and materials, pieces of furniture, abstractions and feelings cross paths and collide. Michel Raskine leads a group of nine student-actors in the adventure that is this play written in a gushing yet controlled language, which keeps the audience at a distance but hits them in their flesh. With his actors, he offers both a choral dimension and an individual one. For the director, the country, the city, subjected to torments by Manolis Tsipos, speaks of our fears, of the places we live in. Yet the images we've been seeing from Greece for the past two years—demonstrations, the violence of police repression, the rise of poverty and of the far right—are not invoked directly by the author. The students of the class 26 of the drama school of Saint- Étienne also find inspiration in the aesthetics of two Greek poets who lived thousands of years apart: Aeschylus and Theo Angelopoulos.

Manolis Tsipos was born in 1979 in Athens, where he studied environmental science and drama. A writer, playwright, director, and performer, he has won multiple awards and taken part in festivals all over the world. In 2006, he founded the company Nova Melancholia (theatre and cinema), whose shows revolve around on-stage writing based on preexisting texts (by Rabelais, Shakespeare, Benjamin, Tsipos himself, etc.). Nova Melancholia likes to combine plastic arts, dance, and multimedia, in order to evoke an emotion that would be not only sentimental, but also aesthetic and intellectual.

Laurent Muhleisen, April 2014

Distribution

Workshop show managed by Michel Raskine
French text  Myrto Gondicas
Costumes Ouria Dahmani-Khouhli
Artistic collaboration  Hubert Blanchet, Daniel Cerisier, Ouria Dahmani-Khouhli, Myriam Djemour, Fabrice Drevet, Thomas Ganz, Adèle Grépinet

With les élèves-comédiens de 2e année (promotion 26)
Julien Bodet, Thomas Jubert, Gaspard Liberelle, Aurélia Lüscher, Tibor Ockenfels, Maurin Olles, Pauline Panassenko, Manon Raffaelli, Mélissa Zehner

Production

Production École de la Comédie de Saint-Étienne École supérieure d'art dramatique
Coproduction La Comédie de Saint-Étienne Centre dramatique national
Avec le soutien du Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication, DRAC Rhône-Alpes, Région Rhône-Alpes, Ville de Saint-Étienne, Maison Antoine Vitez, Fondation BNP Paribas
Remerciements à Grégory Bonnefont, Marief Guittier, Martin Peuvergne, Philippe Roux

Practical infos

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