At once a brutal fairy tale and a Shakespearean tragedy that uses dance, video, and live music, this play follows a tyrant wandering the halls of his cardboard palace while singing his own praises.
At once a brutal fairy tale and a Shakespearean tragedy that uses dance, video, and live music, Boyzie Cekwana's latest creation focuses on a democratic tyrant. The Last King wanders the petrified halls of his cardboard palace and sings his own praises “like blood oozing from a wounded body.” Imagined during the American Presidential election, inspired by the situation in South Africa and Europe, Kakfontein analyses the behaviour of the demagogues who have risen to power and comments their repeated attacks on the democratic project. Is our time that different from the 1930s? How can we have given up on the hope created by the long marches for civil rights? In a way reminiscent of the songs and dances of protest that set the streets of Johannesburg on fire in the 1980s, the South African choreographer stages the downfall of those new cynical kings who trample the social contract and try to silence dissent. A piece that reminds us that Boyzie Cekwana, a major figure in the world of dance in South Africa, is much more than a maker of shows: he is a look-out who never tires of questioning society and denouncing its changes when they attack rights and freedom.
Distribution
Direction, choreography, stage design, costumes Boyzie Cekwana Music Madala Kunene, Mandisa Nzama Lights Matthews Phala Video Lungile Cekwana
With Boyzie Cekwana, Lungile Cekwana And Madala Kunene(guitar), Mandisa Nzama (singer)
Production
Production Randomirekshnz Co-production Zürcher Theater Spektakel (Zurich), Festival d'Avignon, Festival de Marseille, Spielart Festival München (Munich), HAU Hebbel am Ufer (Berlin) With the support of Fondation BNP Paribas for the 71st edition of the Festival d'Avignon Co-hosting Festival d'Avignon, La Chartreuse de Villeneuve lez Avignon In partnership with France Médias Monde
Focus on Sub-Saharan AfricaRepresentation in English with French surtitles
Restauration
Please arrive at the venue 45 minutes before the start of the performance. Please note that parking spaces and the nearest bus stop are a 10-minute walk away. We advise you to arrive early, as we do not accept latecomers once the performance has started.