Poetry and power, beauty and violence, memory and consent: the Anagoor Company takes on these themes with Virgilio brucia in an unsettling prospective, entering the workshop of the intellectual who sung the advent of the Roman Empire.
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Teatro Studio Melato
Poetry and power, beauty and violence, memory and consent: the Anagoor Company takes on these themes with Virgilio Brucia in an unsettling prospective, entering the workshop of the intellectual who sung the advent of the Roman Empire. Indeed the figure of Publio Vrigilio Marone was marked by the prejudice of having been the poet for Augustus, who cancelled all remaining hope for the re-establishment of a Republic in Ancient Rome. A poet at the service of Imperial Ideology, in which Anagoor however sees cracks: the points of attack are two books fromthe Aeneid, those which Virgil read to Augustus, and which narrate the violence of the destruction of Ilion and the kingdom of Troy, the journey to the afterlife, the definitive caesura with the past, relegated to memory. Thus Virgilio Brucia becomes a chance to leaf through the relationship between art and power, the function of culture and memory, the imperial war, the violence and the rapport that Virgil, son of Mantova farmers, had with nature, an element which often appears both as protagonist and backdrop in the Latin poet's works and the creations of the company. An identification of Virgil with Aeneas, cadenced both by live choral music and ancient European and non-European traditions which embody the magic of the aoidos who first sang the epos of Troy and the Trojans, right up to the contemporary minimalism of John Tavener.
Duration: One hour and 40 minutes
Poetry and power, beauty and violence, memory and consent: the Anagoor Company takes on these themes with Virgilio Brucia in an unsettling prospective, entering the workshop of the intellectual who sung the advent of the Roman Empire. Indeed the figure of Publio Vrigilio Marone was marked by the prejudice of having been the poet for Augustus, who cancelled all remaining hope for the re-establishment of a Republic in Ancient Rome. A poet at the service of Imperial Ideology, in which Anagoor however sees cracks: the points of attack are two books fromthe Aeneid, those which Virgil read to Augustus, and which narrate the violence of the destruction of Ilion and the kingdom of Troy, the journey to the afterlife, the definitive caesura with the past, relegated to memory. Thus Virgilio Brucia becomes a chance to leaf through the relationship between art and power, the function of culture and memory, the imperial war, the violence and the rapport that Virgil, son of Mantova farmers, had with nature, an element which often appears both as protagonist and backdrop in the Latin poet's works and the creations of the company. An identification of Virgil with Aeneas, cadenced both by live choral music and ancient European and non-European traditions which embody the magic of the aoidos who first sang the epos of Troy and the Trojans, right up to the contemporary minimalism of John Tavener.
Duration: One hour and 40 minutes
Credits
Piccolo Teatro Studio Melato
from 26 to 31 January 2016
Virgilio Brucia (Virgil Burns)
with Marco Menegoni, Gayanée Movsisyan, Massimiliano Briarava, Moreno Callegari, Marta Kolega, Gloria Lindeman, Monica Tonietto, Emanuela Guizzon, Aglaia Zanetti, Massimo Simonetto, Artemio Tosello
with the extraordinary participation of Marco Cavalcoli
directed by Simone Derai; dramaturgy Simone Derai, Patrizia Vercesi
costumes by Serena Bussolaro, Simone Derai; sets by Simone Derai, Luisa Fabris
video by Simone Derai, Giulio Favotto; music by Mauro Martinuz
inspired by the works of Publio Virgilio Marone, Hermann Broch, Emmanuel Carrère, Danilo Kiš, Alessandro Barchiesi, Alessandro Fo, Joyce Carol Oates
a Anagoor 2014 production
in coproduction with Festival delle Colline Torinesi, Centrale Fies, Operaestate Festival Veneto, University of Zagreb-Student Centre in Zagreb-Culture of Change
Anagoor is part of Fies Factory e APAP-Performing Europe
Save indications to the contrary, the times of the show at the Piccolo are as follows: Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, 7.30 p.m.; Wednesday and Friday 8.30 p.m.; Sunday 4.00 p.m.
GUEST PRODUCTION – SPECIAL PRICES