Going against the flow, and even from infancy, it is so difficult that at some point you want to buy yourself a new life. So did the protagonist of this performance, born 70 years old shaggy old man and living backwards - as an old man clever, with a hardened body, and at the same time as a child helpless in everything that concerns interaction with people.
A very difficult task for an artist is to show a consistent transformation of a person from deep old age to childhood in 27 minutes. Unlike the original source - the story of Scott Fitzgerald's "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" - in the production of Radu Poklitaru, instead of 4 generations of Batton men, more action is given to women. The wife of the protagonist, the daughter (adult and small), the mistress (the duet with which is one of the most beautiful places of the performance) and the granddaughter are a whole female world, next to which the life challenge and loneliness of the central character appear even sharper.
That's really true, "blessed is he who was young from his youth": the Man in Black is watching the suffering hero - the one who is not in the Fitzgerald story. Someone in whose hands the hero's chance to replay all over again. This mystical figure in a long cloak, it seems, has neither human nor historical age (the rest of the industrial era is easily recognizable by the rest), enters the stage through the door, behind which a blinding light, and gives the story a completely different scale. The hero will kiss the Man in the black hand and sell his life to live it differently.
But he will not be able to change anything. Even the Man in Black does not have power over the hero's special lot - again an old man, then a mature and young man, and finally again a boy who sets off a cry in a column of dense stage smoke. This performance is a very unusual unfolding of the old vanitas genre, which allegorically represents the futility of vain claims of power over destiny.
The premiere was held on April 25-26, 2017
Details of the playThe premiere of the new program of choreographic miniatures "Postscript" combines new productions and miniatures from the theater's repertoire, building them into a sequence where none is a continuation of the other and at the same time they do not form a linear plot. However, this is precisely where the tension of the evening is born. Each part seems to shift the internal support, changes the optics, and the next number is already perceived differently, with a new sensitivity.
The program includes new miniatures:
“The Shell” to music by Jean-Philippe Rameau.
A choreographic miniature based on virtuoso choreography and complex interaction between performers. Devoid of a linear plot, “The Shell” unfolds through images, rhythm, and precise choreographic form, leaving the viewer room for individual interpretation.
"Moonlight Sonata" to the music of Ludwig van Beethoven.
Its composition is built as a trio for two men and one woman. The interaction of the three figures on stage reveals the tension of divergent desires, inner impulses and choices.
And finally, the main event of the evening is the premiere of the mini-ballet "I Love You" to the music of Peteris Vasks.
The work is based, on the one hand, on the famous Musica dolorosa, and on the other hand, on the libretto of Radu Poklitaru. This is a performance-reflection on how loved ones who have left us do not disappear from our everyday lives. "I Love You" speaks of love not as a beautiful confession, but as a force that continues to act even after separation. And it poses the main question without pathos, almost in a whisper: how mortal can love itself be?
In addition to new productions, the program included miniatures from the theater's repertoire: "These People" and "Oh, I'm an Unhappy Chumak" directed by Kateryna Kurman, as well as "1+1+1" and "Let's Dance to Pergolesi" directed by Radu Poklitaru.
Details of the play