Where does violence come from? How do we stop the violence? Will the world ever cease to be violent? What is violence? A burden not only for Iphegenia and the Atrides. As of today mankind has found no other way to combat violence than with violence itself, always in the name of a father to avenge.
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Teatro Strehler
From Chekhov to the Atrides. After having taken on, with originality, the obsessions of Treplev and Nina in The Seagull last season, Carmelo Rifici chooses a dive into myth for the second production to be born from the collaboration with the LAC of Lugano (in which Rifici is the artistic director of the theatrical section) and the Piccolo (for which he directs the School of theatre). Iphegenia is only the beginning of the investigation which Rifici proposes to the spectator, calling on Heraclitus, Homer, Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides, René Girard, and the Old and New Testaments to provide stories and reflections on the true protagonist of the work: the violence of mankind as an inextricable reality and endless mystery. This work sees the continuation of the fertile and successful collaboration between Rifici and Angela Demattè, a playwright of great depth, with which the director has created the plays Avevo un bel pallone rosso, an examination of the figure of Margherita Cagol, the founder of the Red Brigades, Officina and Chi resta, on the elaboration of mourning for the relatives and victims of the mafia and massacres.
`A rehearsal room, actors and audience together – explains Carmelo Rifici –. A director and a playwright try once more to study the Legend of the Antrides, the sacrifice of Iphegenia. Posing questions regarding this age-old subject: where does violence come from? how can we stop the violence? will the word ever cease to be violent? what is violence? Crushed by paternal will, infected by the folly of the people, Iphegenia seemed unable to escape a hopeless destiny in which only the blood of an innocent could calm the violent hordes. Not only the Antrides, but all of the Western world carried the burden. The words of Athena which conclude the Oreseia, her delegating responsibility to mankind through shared laws, have still not lead to a solution. And yet there is a word which could stop the infernal machine, a word capable of unmasking the deception, but it is too inconvenient to pronounce, too dangerous for the ancient desire of man to overpower, to continuously desire what the other has».
Duration: two hours and 30 minutes with interval
Learn more
Booklet
ReadFrom Chekhov to the Atrides. After having taken on, with originality, the obsessions of Treplev and Nina in The Seagull last season, Carmelo Rifici chooses a dive into myth for the second production to be born from the collaboration with the LAC of Lugano (in which Rifici is the artistic director of the theatrical section) and the Piccolo (for which he directs the School of theatre). Iphegenia is only the beginning of the investigation which Rifici proposes to the spectator, calling on Heraclitus, Homer, Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides, René Girard, and the Old and New Testaments to provide stories and reflections on the true protagonist of the work: the violence of mankind as an inextricable reality and endless mystery. This work sees the continuation of the fertile and successful collaboration between Rifici and Angela Demattè, a playwright of great depth, with which the director has created the plays Avevo un bel pallone rosso, an examination of the figure of Margherita Cagol, the founder of the Red Brigades, Officina and Chi resta, on the elaboration of mourning for the relatives and victims of the mafia and massacres.
`A rehearsal room, actors and audience together – explains Carmelo Rifici –. A director and a playwright try once more to study the Legend of the Antrides, the sacrifice of Iphegenia. Posing questions regarding this age-old subject: where does violence come from? how can we stop the violence? will the word ever cease to be violent? what is violence? Crushed by paternal will, infected by the folly of the people, Iphegenia seemed unable to escape a hopeless destiny in which only the blood of an innocent could calm the violent hordes. Not only the Antrides, but all of the Western world carried the burden. The words of Athena which conclude the Oreseia, her delegating responsibility to mankind through shared laws, have still not lead to a solution. And yet there is a word which could stop the infernal machine, a word capable of unmasking the deception, but it is too inconvenient to pronounce, too dangerous for the ancient desire of man to overpower, to continuously desire what the other has».
Duration: two hours and 30 minutes with interval
Learn more
Booklet
ReadCredits
Piccolo Teatro Strehler
from 27 April to 07 May 2017
Ifigenia, liberata
texts from Heraclitus, Homer, Aeschylus, Sophocles and Euripides, the Old and New Testaments, René Girard, Giuseppe Fornari
dramaturgy by Angela Dematté and Carmelo Rifici
directed by Carmelo Rifici
sets by Margherita Palli
masks by Roberto Mestroni
costumes by Margherita Baldoni
music by Zeno Gabaglio
light design by JeanLuc Chanonnat
with (in alphabetical order) Caterina Carpio, Giovanni Crippa, Zeno Gabaglio, Vincenzo Giordano, Tindaro Granata, Mariangela Granelli, Igor Horvat, Francesca Porrini, Edoardo Ribatto, Giorgia Senesi, Anahì Traversi
a LuganoInscena production
in co-production with LAC Lugano Arte e Cultura , Piccolo Teatro di Milano-Teatro d'Europa and Azimut
in collaboration with Spoleto Festival dei 2Mondi, Theater Chur
with the support of Prohelvetia, Fondazione svizzera per la cultura
Information and bookings
Telephone service 02.42.41.48.89
From Monday to Saturday 9.45 a.m. – 6.45 p.m.
Sunday 10.00 a.m. – 5.00 p.m.
Teatro Strehler
From Monday to Saturday 9.45 a.m. to 6.45 p.m.
Sunday 1.00 p.m. to 6.30 p.m.
On the evening of the performance the sale of tickets will close one hour before the performance begins.
Groups and organisations
For information on tickets and subscriptions for groups and organisations, and afternoon performances for schools and educational shows, please contact the Servizio Promozione Pubblico e Proposte Culturali.
Tel.02.72.333.216
e-mail:promozione.pubblico@piccoloteatromilano.it