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Via Intolleranza II is an irresistibly witty theatrical chaos about the construction of an opera village.

photo: Aino Laberenz

De vorig jaar aan longkanker overleden Künstler Christoph Schlingensief – alleskunner, provocateur, regisseur, levenskunstenaar – krijgt op het Holland Festival een uitgebreid eerbetoon: de openingsvoorstelling Mea Culpa, een programma met zeven speelfilms, en Schlingensiefs zwanenzang Via Intolleranza II.

Doodziek vatte Christoph Schlingensief het wilde plan op om in Burkina Faso een operadorp uit de grond te stampen, Remdoogo. Een zelfvoorzienende vrijplaats waar mensen vanuit verschillende culturen elkaar zouden kunnen ontmoeten, en om daar voor langere tijd samen kunst te maken. Dit in navolging van vergelijkbare initiatieven zoals het Avenida Theater in Mozambique, opgezet door schrijver Henning Mankell. Schlingensief streefde naar het samenvloeien van kunst en leven. Gedreven uit een jarenlange fascinatie voor de rijke Afrikaanse cultuur, en geïnspireerd op de idealen van zijn grote held Joseph Beuys.

Via Intolleranza II is Schlingensiefs poging om in een maalstroom van documentaire, muziek, beeldende kunst, film, performancekunst, lezing, opera en theater het prille wordingsproces van Remdoogo vast te leggen. Een voorstelling over een proces. Tegelijkertijd lijkt Schlingensief ook zijn eigen motieven te bevragen. Via Intolleranza II was zijn zwanenzang – hij stierf drie maanden na de première. De voorstelling krijgt op zaterdag 4 juni de Nederlandse première.

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'Your audience will love it.' That was the last thing Liz Lecompte of the Wooster Group heard from the heirs of playwright Tennessee Williams shortly before the premiere of Vieux Carré. Since then, the trustees of the estate of this American monument have been keeping quiet about the performance Lecompte created. It was the end of a long period in which... 

You'd be interested to know what Spalding Gray and Christoph Schlingensief would have had to say to each other.

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Boris Charmatz's dancers in ''Levée des conflits'' Photo Caroline Ablain.

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But what about the goat?

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Dancers by Yasmeen Godder - photo Itzik Giuli

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Springdance opens with Botelho's Sideways Rain: fascinating intensity of dance, but lack of consistency


Scene from Sideways Rain by Botelho. Photo by Jean-Yves Genoud

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