As a gesture of love, an adolescent gives up their very essence (their tail) in a desperate attempt to be accepted, in a desperate attempt to be loved. The famous tale by Andersen is re-read as a metaphor for sexual identity. La Sirenetta provokes a reflection on love, the most difficult kind, that for ourselves and the body we live in.
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Teatro Grassi
The wonderful tale by Andersen has always provoked the directorial, pictorial and dramaturgical fantasy of many artists, probably for the richness of semi-metaphors which fill the text. Never have myth and tale come together so viscerally as in the case of La Sirenetta, to create almost a third genre, suspended between the strength of the particular archetype of myth and the unlimited, dreamlike fantasy of tales.
This revisiting tells the story of an adolescent who, as a gesture of love, gives up their very essence (their tail) in a desperate attempt to be accepted, in a desperate attempt to be loved. The famous tale by Andersen is thus re-read as a metaphor for sexual identity.
“We began with letters written by adolescents who decided to kill themselves because they didn’t feel accepted for their sexuality”, write the authors. Adolescents who had renounced their own voices for who knows how long. “La Sirenetta” provokes a reflection on love, the most difficult kind, that for ourselves and the body we live in.
“There is a moment in which all of us are equal and undefined, without distinction of sex and gender. This is where everything begins. In this moment I state my boundaries. Head, arms and tail.”
The Eco di fondo company was founded in Milan in 2009 by Giacomo Ferraù and Giulia Viana, graduate actors from the Accademia dei Filodrammatici of Milan in 2007. It has for some time been committed to a research project aimed at re-reading the most famous myths and tales as metaphors for topical themes.
Duration: 65 minutes
The wonderful tale by Andersen has always provoked the directorial, pictorial and dramaturgical fantasy of many artists, probably for the richness of semi-metaphors which fill the text. Never have myth and tale come together so viscerally as in the case of La Sirenetta, to create almost a third genre, suspended between the strength of the particular archetype of myth and the unlimited, dreamlike fantasy of tales.
This revisiting tells the story of an adolescent who, as a gesture of love, gives up their very essence (their tail) in a desperate attempt to be accepted, in a desperate attempt to be loved. The famous tale by Andersen is thus re-read as a metaphor for sexual identity.
“We began with letters written by adolescents who decided to kill themselves because they didn’t feel accepted for their sexuality”, write the authors. Adolescents who had renounced their own voices for who knows how long. “La Sirenetta” provokes a reflection on love, the most difficult kind, that for ourselves and the body we live in.
“There is a moment in which all of us are equal and undefined, without distinction of sex and gender. This is where everything begins. In this moment I state my boundaries. Head, arms and tail.”
The Eco di fondo company was founded in Milan in 2009 by Giacomo Ferraù and Giulia Viana, graduate actors from the Accademia dei Filodrammatici of Milan in 2007. It has for some time been committed to a research project aimed at re-reading the most famous myths and tales as metaphors for topical themes.
Duration: 65 minutes
Credits
Piccolo Teatro Grassi
from 7 to 8 June 2017
La Sirenetta
directed by Giacomo Ferraù
with the collaboration of the director Arturo Cirillo
dramaturgy Giacomo Ferraù and Giulia Viana with the collaboration of the company
with Riccardo Buffonini, Giacomo Ferraù, Libero Stelluti, Giulia Viana
director’s assistant Piera Mungiguerra, Simon Waldvogel and Michele Basile
light design Giuliano Almerighi
choreographic coordination Riccardo Olivier
video project Riccardo Calamandrei
organisation Elisa Binda
An Eco di fondo production in co-production with Campo Teatrale
Supported as part of the NEXT 2015 / Lombardy Region project
With the patronage of Amnesty International Italia and EveryOne group
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
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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