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Transmissions

IT IS TO BE SAID…

Friday March 15 and Saturday March 16, 19:30 • MPAA Saint-Germain, 4 rue Félibien, 75006 Paris •
Friday March 15 and Saturday March 16, 19:30 • MPAA Saint-Germain, 4 rue Félibien, 75006 Paris •
Friday March 15 and Saturday March 16, 19:30 • MPAA Saint-Germain, 4 rue Félibien, 75006 Paris •
Friday March 15 and Saturday March 16, 19:30 • MPAA Saint-Germain, 4 rue Félibien, 75006 Paris •
Friday March 15 and Saturday March 16, 19:30 • MPAA Saint-Germain, 4 rue Félibien, 75006 Paris •
Friday March 15 and Saturday March 16, 19:30 • MPAA Saint-Germain, 4 rue Félibien, 75006 Paris •
Friday March 15 and Saturday March 16, 19:30 • MPAA Saint-Germain, 4 rue Félibien, 75006 Paris •

Musical, theatrical and choreographic performance with graduating students from the École Supérieure d’Art Dramatique de Paris and the music and dance departments of the Pôle Supérieur Paris Boulogne-Billancourt. 32 young virtuoso artists on stage! An explosion of poetry!

Today we are experiencing a vast listening crisis. Screens, social networks, virtual groups have become mass multipliers of parallel realities that sequester communication in a web of fake news and rhetorical twists of political, historical and scientific discourses: extremist speeches where the language is trapped and the debate emptied of its very substance. Such a situation makes us wonder about the effectiveness and even reliability of the language tools we have at our disposal. The question of communicability then emerges as a problem to be resolved… or at least deconstructed. That is to say, through the crossed languages ​​of dance, theater, and music, we sought to denounce the dysfunctions and limits of our daily language (what makes a language a language and what, in language, traps this same language?). In other words, it is about exploring the fallibility of language as a potential source of new languages. Put in crisis words (and signs) to learn alternative ways of communicating.

The act of saying (even without words) invites us to keep active a secret that is forever indecipherable but which, replaying constantly its primordial and perpetual failure, always seeks an address, an otherness in whom, despite everything, it hopes to find an echo, a (re)call, a translation. This urgent need for recognition and reciprocity in the vertigo of “saying” (or telling) puts this same “saying” in constant danger since once shared – that means out of the self – it is confronted with the unpredictability of the encounter with the other. Therefore, the secret is constantly kept since it is the very guarantor of the maintenance of the relations within the community. Because saying is a way of trying (unsuccessfully) to translate ourselves to the world, and also a way for us to understand – through a complex web of oppositions and crossed affects – this same world, within we exist surrounded by equals but completely alone in our untranslatable difference. And it is precisely this impossibility of translating ourselves to the other that we must experience intensely, radicalize and celebrate as the only certainty in the inevitable uncertainty of saying. This certainty is the only thing that we can share with each other: the certainty of uncertainty.

We came together to create a work whose base is made of our differences, frictions and misunderstandings which are woven into counterpoints, polyphonies, wefts of threads stitched and unstitched in time and space.

“At the unbeginning was the verb.
Only afterwards came the delirium of the verb.
The delirium of the verb was at the beginning...”
Manoel de Barros

“When the word speech [...] saw the word word,
They had nothing to say to each other, QED.”
Jacques Rebotier

CREDITS

Words by Antonin Artaud, Georges Aperghis, Samuel Beckett, Michel Berger, Marcus Borja, Paul Celan, Stig Dagerman, Salvador Dali, Jacques Derrida, Marguerite Duras, Brigitte Fontaine, Elfriede Jelinek, Tadeusz Kantor, Patrick Kermann, Gherasim Luca, Friedrich Nietzsche, Valère Novarina, Fernando Pessoa, Jacques Rebotier, Jean Tardieu…And also Valentine Berthier et Apolline Peccarisi

Original music by Henrique Cantalogo, Anne Soulié and Victor Wetzel

Concept, dramaturgy and direction: Marcus Borja
Musical direction: Aurélie Saraf
Movement direction: Carl Portal
Light design: Zoé Ritchie
Sound design: Haldan de Vulpillières

© Photos : Diego Bresani

Creators / interprets: Cheikh Ahmed Thani, Idir Aïtouche, Zoé Baillargeau, Evans Berthelot, Valentine Berthier, Lena de Beukelaer, Théa Breso, Melchior Burin des Roziers, Henrique Cantalogo, Robin Condamin, Lise Dachary, Nicolas Ducourtieux, Amandine Fauque, Jeanne Fohr, Louise Gandois, Manon Guilluy, Juliana Koldehofe-Marchais, Clément Mariage, Alaïa Michon, Savario Moreau, Giusy Panzanaro, Apolline Peccarisi, Elisa Pézeril, Léna Ravel, Léo Rodier, Marion Roussel, Anne Soulié, Derhen Tetu, Clara Thibault, Jenifer Trebois, Suzie Villemin, Victor Wetzel