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misstcommunication

by The Long Song (Berlin)

an American opera of modern lovers

missTcommunicationA modern parable of love in the 21st century told through two short American chamber operas: The Telephone by Gian Carlo Menotti and The Letter by Brian Hulse

One man, two women and too many phones – Chivalry may not have been killed by Man. In a world of iphones, bluetooth, Skype, & IMs, a sit down, face-to-face conversation seems to be a thing of the distant past. At least that’s what Lucy apparently thinks in the comedic opera The Telephone. Written in 1947 as a social commentary on the encroachment of technology on modern life, Gian Carlo Menotti is again made pertinent in this contemporizedImageinterpretation. A modern parable about the pitfalls of telecommunication, the battle between man and technology is on. Will the couple ever have their Happily Ever After when the telephone is constantly engaged?

Whether irked or inspired by the short sms, the urgent email, the quick IM, are we cured of loneliness forever? Connected, collective, communal; one love, many loves or no love at all?

The second piece of the evening tells the story in the European premiere of Brian Hulse’s contemporary opera The Letter (written in 2003, based on Edith Wharton’s story The Dilettante). Behind the paints and veils of Victorian society, a common theme is the image of women as vulnerable, wilting flowers forever outwitted and overpowered by men. But lurking under the ruffled façades of yesteryear, the mind games between women and men seethed away, masked only in witty allusion. Thursdale´s disreputable affair with Mrs. Vervain may have seemed innocent amidst the backdrop of parlor society in Edith Wharton’s time and when Thursdale proposes to another woman, Miss Gaynor, one may think that man would again trump the ladies in deceit. It is the women however, in this ménage, who rise victorious as they parry in this Suffrage-era tale of an early Women´s Liberation. In the end they extract justice of their own from a culture often too permissive of its men.Image

The artists of THE LONG SONG came together early in 2008 in dedication to American vocal repertoire, much of which remains largely unperformed in Europe. For missTcommunication they´ve chosen one standard and one unknown work of American short opera, both centered on the themes of desire and the need for real connection and intimacy which gets so often lost in our modern society.

Blue Vein

by Duncan Sarkies

elsathorp-bluevein-websiteA tragic tale of an unremarkable man with an all-too-human weakness

It all starts with an innocent cheddar cheese roll, and for a while there Zack seems to have his consumption under control. But when he starts sneaking into the back rooms of parties to get his Camembert fix, spending unhealthy amounts of time at fondues and closing down vital laxative bodily functions, it is clear (to everyone around him, at least) that things have gone desperately wrong…

Alan Glen is a singer-songwriter from Canada. He spent over ten years touring Canada and Europe with his independent band before relocating to Berlin. Since then he has been dividing his time between music and the comedy theatre group Laugh Olympics. Blue Vein is his debut in the theatre as a solo performer.
Fingal Pollock has now been in Berlin for over one year. She came here after spending 18 months studying theatre with a small company of actors in rural India. In Berlin, she has worked with Laugh Olympics, Platypus Theatre, Three of Cups Productions, Galli Theater, Be Berliner, and the TUSCH in Schools project (not to mention some healthy clowning on the side!). She directed a successful run of Blue Vein in New Zealand, but when she met Alan Glen, she knew that she could not deprive the Berlin audience, and herself, of the opportunity of watching him bring this script once again to life.
Duncan Sarkies is a playwright, screen writer, fiction writer and stand-up comic. All of his work is characterized by an eccentric, bizarre and poignant black humour, which can leave the audience wondering whether the author is laughing with them or at them. Sarkies likes to show the ways in which all of us are, if not quite mad, then at least partly unhinged.
Photo: Elsa Thorpe

The Harvest Chamber

For sixty minutes, you are transferred one-hundred years into the future…

…where machines are our gods and human contact is non-existent. Welcome to Gens Incorruptus where members of the society are only intimate with their keyboards.

One day, a male and a female are chosen take part in an experiment. They must meet face to face and form a physical and emotional bond. Is this possible?

Join GI7849 & GI3319, now reborn as Adam and Eve, to find out how it feels to speak for the first time, to meet another being in the flesh and blood, to discover that male and female can be man and woman.They have one hour to perform the task and produce a youngling as directed. Will they succeed?

Yvette Coetzee: NO PALM TREES. NO LIONS. NO MONKEYS.

My family has always been on the ‘perpetrator’ side. Great-grandfather: soldier in the Herero War. Don’t know how many he killed. Grandfather: Nazi. Parents and I: whites in the Apartheid system. And then I left Africa to its fate, and moved to Europe.

NoPalmTreesIf one is born “white” in Africa, paging through the family albums can raise a lot of uncomfortable questions. Yvette Coetzee, author and actress, sets out to look for the answers. In 1904 her German great-grandfather went to (then) South West Africa to fight as a soldier in the Herero War, the first genocide of the 20th century. Afterwards, he bought a farm west of Windhoek, where the author’s Grandmother lives to this day. The 89-year-old speaks German, watches German TV, clings to “her” culture in modern day Namibia.
The private anecdotes of everyday events spanning four generations of a migrant family history, reflect a century of world history: from the beginning of the short German colonial period – through the Third Reich as experienced from the other end of the world – through Apartheid and independence to the current fears of white landowners that their land could be repossessed, and the African “boat people” trying to reach European coasts.
The play, a solo combining elements of acting, performance and object theatre, looks for the connection between these events, attempts to find historic “truths”, and investigates personal responsibility in the face of such an inheritance.

Photo: YC

HYSTERIA

HYSTERIAThe world is ending. And it’s happening at table 9…

TOTAL THEATRE AWARD at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe 2006
“Beautifully observed … wonderfully witty … I laughed until I cried” (The Guardian)

Inspired by T.S. Eliot’s poem of the same name, Hysteria makes us witnesses to a painstaking attempt at social interaction. A man and a woman are on the most awkward dinner date of their lives. He is an academic whose research into modern day neuroses is threatening his sanity, she is an events manager who’s terrified of missing the party. Caught in the middle is their mortified waiter. With humour, physicality and visceral sound and lighting, Hysteria draws its audience into a world where the main course is a fight for survival and a banana can move you to tears.

Hysteria premiered at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival 2006 where it won a Total Theatre Award and was shortlisted for the Carol Tambor Award.

Inspector Sands is a collective of award-winning theatre-makers with a body of acclaimed work between them. Hysteria is a co-production with Stamping Ground Theatre whose A Quiet Afternoon received rave reviews at the Edinburgh Fringe 2004 and on its UK and Irish Tours.

The Promised Land

The Promised Land is the unfulfilled dream of belonging, of finding one´s true home. The play addresses this dream through a look at a relationship seen through juxtaposing their last day together, with the day of their first encounter.

 

Tick My Box!

tickmybox4_300lpiBlind Date meets Blue Velvet.

How do you get to meet that really special someone in the fast and impersonal modern-day world?… Welcome to Speed Dating; the three-minute mating game for the curious, the desperate and the deranged.

Birds do it, bees do it, even scary psychopaths do it…

Tick My Box! follows the adventures and misadventures of a room of hopeful singletons; some get on, some get drunk, some get lucky…one gets stalked!

An unflinching look at the dark side of love.

Iseult Golden and Carmel Stephens play a mesmerizing number of characters under the deft direction of David Horan.

Photo: Niall O’Riordan