Il y a quelque chose de pourri.

a production of Elvis Alatac

Credits

Original idea, writing, direction: Pier Porcheron
Performance: Pier Porcheron, Fabrice Tremblay alternating with Chloé Lorphelin
Acting direction: Maia Comère
Set design: Pier Porcheron
Object dramaturgy: Francis Monty
Set construction: Hugues Bernatchez / Daniel Pérault

SYNOPSIS

Two individuals, one agitated and talkative, the other taciturn and silent, stand before the audience to present their show: William Shakespeare’s Hamlet. One in a bric-a-brac castelet. The other sits on a chair nearby.

The one in the castelet will re-enact the tragedy of Prince Hamlet, assigning roles to objects. But his clumsiness, his over-enthusiasm and his multiple deviations make the performance increasingly shaky. Assisted by the man next door (sound effects, music and other effects), they will tell Denmark’s terrible fate, whatever the cost. This duo shortens a four-hour play to 60 minutes, and a desire to popularize the great classics drives this original creation, which doesn’t hesitate to draw on cinematic references to get at the drama and stir up the audience’s laughter.

Practical Information

Duration arrow_right icon  60 min.
For ages arrow_right icon 12 years olds and more
Year of creation arrow_right icon 2013

technical info

Dimensions minimum
Width arrow_right icon 13′
Depth arrow_right icon 13′
Height arrow_right icon 7′

a production of
représenté par

SYNOPSIS

Two individuals, one agitated and talkative, the other taciturn and silent, stand before the audience to present their show: William Shakespeare’s Hamlet. One in a bric-a-brac castelet. The other sits on a chair nearby.

The one in the castelet will re-enact the tragedy of Prince Hamlet, assigning roles to objects. But his clumsiness, his over-enthusiasm and his multiple deviations make the performance increasingly shaky. Assisted by the man next door (sound effects, music and other effects), they will tell Denmark’s terrible fate, whatever the cost. This duo shortens a four-hour play to 60 minutes, and a desire to popularize the great classics drives this original creation, which doesn’t hesitate to draw on cinematic references to get at the drama and stir up the audience’s laughter.

Practical Information

Duration arrow_right icon  60 min.
For ages arrow_right icon 12 years olds and +
Year of creation arrow_right icon 2013

technical info

Width arrow_right icon 13′
Depth arrow_right icon 13′
Height arrow_right icon 7′

a production of
représenté par