Épisodes

  • Caryl Churchill – Form experimentation
    Feb 24 2026

    Caryl Churchill – Form experimentation

    London, 1982. The audience at the Royal Court Theatre murmurs with anticipation as they open their programs to an unusual page: a dinner menu and biographies of characters who span centuries. Soon the lights dim, and on stage an epic dinner party springs to life. Around a long, glittering table sit women from different times and places: there’s Isabella Bird, a Victorian era explorer in her proper jacket; Lady Nijo, a 13th-century Japanese courtesan-turned-nun, in a kimono; Pope Joan, the legendary female Pope of the 9th century, in full pontifical robes; Patient Griselda, the obedient wife from medieval folklore, in peasant garb; and others including a brash waitress who is actually a character from Chaucer. Presiding among them is Marlene, a sharp-suited 1980s career woman who has apparently invited these ladies of history to celebrate her promotion at work. What follows in Top Girls’ opening act is a theatrical feast—wine is poured, stories are shared. The women talk over each other, interrupting and laughing, their dialogue overlapping like a real lively dinner (an innovation in scriptwriting, those overlapping lines marked by slashes in the text). They share tales of childbirth, loss, sacrifice, ambition. Pope Joan recounts how she concealed her female identity to rise in the Church, only to be stoned to death when discovered; Lady Nijo recalls the heartbreak of giving up her children in the Emperor’s court. As the courses progress, the stories become more intimate and tragic, even as some of the women drunkenly giggle. Marlene listens, cheers, occasionally shares her own boasts of the modern successes women can achieve. By scene’s end, Isabella Bird is slumped under the table drunk, Patient Griselda is quietly weeping, and Marlene toasts to their courage across time.

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    18 min
  • Sarah Kane – In-yer-face theatre
    Feb 17 2026

    Sarah Kane – In-yer-face theatre

    London, January 1995. A cold rain slicks the streets of Sloane Square as theatergoers file into the tiny upstairs auditorium of the Royal Court Theatre. They don’t know quite what they’re in for, but rumors have been swirling: a new play by a 23-year-old woman that is supposed to be shocking beyond belief. The lights dim, and Blasted begins. On stage, a hotel room is meticulously realized: floral bedspread, room service tray, the soft buzz of a TV in the background. A middle-aged man, heavyset and rough around the edges, enters with a young woman, nervous and wary. The first scene proceeds almost like a conventional drama—an uneasy seduction-cum-power-struggle between Ian, a foul-mouthed tabloid journalist, and Cate, a frail, childlike woman in her twenties. The audience settles in, thinking perhaps this will be an intense but familiar chamber piece about abuse or love gone wrong. Indeed, Ian’s crass jokes and Cate’s panic attacks create tension. Then suddenly, about halfway through, reality rips open—literally. An explosion rocks the theatre; the stage goes dark. When lights return, the hotel room’s wall has been blown apart. Rubble is everywhere. And in through the gaping hole steps a soldier with an assault rifle, eyes burning with fury. The play shifts in an instant from personal horror to war nightmare. Over the next brutal scenes, that soldier will terrorize Ian and Cate. At one point, in one of the most notorious moments in modern theatre, the Soldier pins Ian down and gouges out his eyes. Gasps fill the audience; a woman in the third row vomits into her handbag. Some people stand abruptly, stumbling for the exit—one man mutters “This is filth!” as he leaves. But others are frozen in their seats, faces pale, unable to look away from the relentless unfolding of violence and despair on stage.

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    16 min
  • Ariane Mnouchkine – Collective creation
    Feb 10 2026

    Ariane Mnouchkine – Collective creation

    Paris, 1973. The dim, cavernous interior of La Cartoucherie—a former munitions factory on the outskirts of the city—has been transformed into a bustling revolutionary fairground. It is here that 1789, a theatrical reenactment of the French Revolution, is about to unfold, not on a single stage but all around the audience. The spectators, a mix of students, workers, intellectuals, and curious Parisians, mill about uncertainly. There are no plush seats; instead, platforms and scaffoldings are arranged like islands in a sea of standing viewers. The smell of fresh bread and onion soup wafts through the air—members of the troupe have cooked a simple soup they plan to share with the audience during intermission, an offering of fellowship. Suddenly, a drumroll resounds. Actors in 18th-century peasant garb emerge, shouting grievances and singing a rousing tune of rebellion. On a raised platform to the left, an actor playing a starched-wig aristocrat topples a pile of fake coins, symbolizing the collapse of the old order. On another platform to the right, a group of sans-culottes (revolutionary commoners) hoist a makeshift tricolor flag and cheer. The audience instinctively splits to give space as a chorus of market women with baskets snakes through, singing of bread and justice. Laughter erupts when one of the “aristocrats” flees through the crowd, pursued by a yelling mob of actors who gently sweep some spectators into their chase. In the midst of this orchestrated chaos stands Ariane Mnouchkine, the director, though you wouldn’t know it at first glance. She’s dressed plainly, moving among her actors and occasionally among the audience, guiding the action with the lightest touch—a whispered cue here, a hand signal there. Her face is alive with intensity; at 34, she has already the gravitas and warmth of a beloved leader. This isn’t just a play to her—it’s a communal ceremony, a living slice of history shared by actors and audience together. For a moment, as a guillotine prop is rolled out and a red scarf flutters down symbolizing the blood of the tyrants, Ariane steps back and observes the faces around her. People are enthralled, surprised, moved. Strangers grin at each other as a sly joke is played out by an actor mimicking King Louis. A few eyes well with tears when the crowd sings a mournful verse about hunger. The barriers between “them” (the performers) and “us” (the audience) have dissolved; all are, in effect, citizens of this theatrical revolutionary France for the night. This is the magic of Théâtre du Soleil, the Theatre of the Sun, which Ariane Mnouchkine founded and nurtured: a collective creation that envelops everyone in its warmth.

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    19 min
  • Judith Malina & Julian Beck – The Living Theatre
    Feb 3 2026

    Judith Malina & Julian Beck – The Living Theatre

    New York City, 1963. It’s a sweltering August evening on West 14th Street, and inside a small, dimly lit theatre, hell is breaking loose on stage. The play is The Brig, a searing depiction of a day in a U.S. Marine Corps military prison. Under the unforgiving glare of fluorescent lights, young men in khaki uniforms bark orders at other men who scramble, heads shaved, chins dripping sweat, performing endless punitive exercises. “Move, move, move, you maggots!” a guard shrieks as prisoners jump at top speed in place. The sound of boots hitting the floor in unison—thump, thump, thump—creates a brutal rhythm. The audience is wedged on benches almost within arm’s reach of the action, flinching as each abuse is hurled and enacted. In the front row sit Judith Malina and Julian Beck, co-directors of The Living Theatre and the midwives of this harrowing production. Judith, a petite woman with intense eyes and long dark hair, clenches her hands; Julian, tall and gaunt with a mane of wild hair and paint-splattered jeans, bites his lip. They know this performance is special—and possibly the last in this space. Because outside the theatre’s double doors, city marshals and police officers have gathered. The Living Theatre, they claim, owes back taxes and fines; tonight, they intend to shut it down.

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    18 min
  • Richard Schechner – Performance theory
    Jan 27 2026

    Richard Schechner – Performance theory

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    17 min
  • Heiner Müller – Fragmented drama
    Jan 20 2026

    Heiner Müller – Fragmented drama

    East Berlin, 1961. The auditorium of the Volksbühne theatre is packed to the rafters on a damp autumn night. A new play called Die Umsiedlerin (“The Resettler Woman”) is making its debut, and whispers have spread that this piece might be controversial. Behind the curtain, the playwright Heiner Müller paces, a slender 32-year-old with a mop of dark hair, chain-smoking even as he steels himself for what’s to come. On stage, the final scene is reaching its peak: actors portray peasants forced to relocate under a government program, their bitterness and confusion palpable. A stern Party official character in the play extols the glorious future of collective farms—but his speech is undercut by the silent stare of a tired old woman cradling a suitcase, representing those left disillusioned. When the curtain falls, there’s a beat of heavy silence. Then, scattered applause. Some in the audience are moved; they recognize the truth in the play’s portrayal of upheaval in their lives. Others remain quiet. In the second row, a cultural functionary in a gray suit leans over to his comrade and mutters, “This will never see another performance.” Müller peeks out from the wings and senses the unease. His jaw tightens. By the next morning, the verdict from the authorities comes swiftly: Die Umsiedlerin is banned, shut down after that single performance. The young playwright has been branded a troublemaker. Heiner Müller exhales a stream of cigarette smoke and understands that an official shadow has fallen over him—one that will follow him for decades.

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    17 min
  • Robert Wilson – Slow time, visual theatre
    Jan 13 2026

    Robert Wilson – Slow time, visual theatre

    Avignon, 1976. Late on a July evening in the cobbled courtyard of the Théâtre Municipal, hundreds of festival-goers sit on wooden benches beneath a darkening sky. On stage, a strange and hypnotic tableau unfolds. A line of figures in unison slow-motion crosses from left to right, their movements deliberate and dreamlike. A young woman in a white dress steps forward, raises her arm at an impossibly languid pace, and points toward a bright halo of light. From the orchestra pit, an electric organ sustains a pulsating chord that seems to suspend time itself. In the front row, a man wipes sweat from his brow; it’s been four hours, and yet the performance of Einstein on the Beach is still in full flow, no intermission in sight. Some audience members quietly slip out for a break, then wander back in—a courtesy the director has encouraged. Up in the lighting booth stands Robert Wilson, tall and still at age thirty-four, his eyes taking in every detail. He wears all black, silver hair pulled into a tight ponytail, the very picture of calm control. As a gentle chorus of “do-re-mi” syllables echoes onstage in an endless loop, Wilson allows a rare, slight smile. This is his world: a theatre where time stretches, images speak louder than words, and the spectators’ sense of reality is slowly, inexorably being transformed.

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    18 min
  • Federico García Lorca – Poetic realism
    Jan 11 2026

    THE RADICALS & AVANT-GARDE 1920–1970

    Federico García Lorca’s theatre unfolds like a folk song that turns into a scream. He was a Spanish poet-playwright who infused the real stories of rural Spain with surreal imagery and lyrical symbolism, creating a style often called poetic realism. In Lorca’s plays, the setting might be a humble village or a family home bound by tradition, but the language and emotion soar to passionate heights, and fate itself feels like a character hovering just offstage.

    Lorca grew up in Andalusia, in southern Spain – a land of flamenco music, gypsy lore, intense religious fervor, and codified honor codes. He loved the traditional forms (folk ballads, flamenco “deep song”), and he once said he tried to “resurrect and revitalize the most basic strains of Spanish poetry and theatre” . His major plays certainly do that. Often grouped as the “rural trilogy,” Blood Wedding (1933), Yerma (1934), and The House of Bernarda Alba (1936) dig into the soil of Spanish society – examining passion, oppression, and the collision between individual desire and societal mores – with a mix of earthy realism and flights of poetry.

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    10 min