Celebrating 25 Years of Scoop
Licence needed for work use Learn More
Top Scoops

Book Reviews | Gordon Campbell | Scoop News | Wellington Scoop | Community Scoop | Search

 

Arts Festival Review: T.E.O.R.E.M.A.T.

It Was 40 Years Ago Today

Review by Richard Thomson

T.E.O.R.E.M.A.T.
A TR Warszawa Production
13, 14, 16-19 March, 8pm
TSB Bank Arena


The 1960s were a highwater mark for the kind of glacially-paced and existentially introspective cinema that hardly anyone makes – or watches – any more, and no one made those movies quite like the Italians: think of directors such as Visconti, Antonioni, Fellini and Pier Paolo Pasolini.

Polish theatre director Grzegorz Jarzyna has adapted Pasolini's 1968 film Theorem as T.E.O.R.E.M.A.T., which makes an odd sort of counterpoint to the earlier festival show Sound of Silence. The two Eastern European theatre companies present very different takes on sex and the social changes of the 1960s.

In both productions, sex is a subversive act, but in Silence it was the dourly authoritarian surveillance state machinery of the USSR that was subverted. T.E.O.R.E.M.A.T. makes almost the reverse case, documenting the disintegration of the members of a wealthy Italian family after a visitor comes to stay and seduces each of them in turn, exposing them to the possibility of personal self-fulfilment and a life outside the conventions and compulsions of the family, the law and the capitalist economy.

If anything locates the production most specifically in the 1960s, other than the immaculately modernist set design and costumes, it's the idea that sex could pose a threat to the consumer society and advanced capitalism. You only have to look to Italy in 2010, where president Silvio Berlusconi's party is accused of

Further irony can be found in Pasolini's own death – murdered in 1975, ostensibly at the hands of a young man he picked up for sex but long suspected to have been politically motivated. (Pasolini had called for the leaders of Italy's ruling right-wing party to be put on trial, something that Berlusconi is still, 40 years later, trying to avoid.)

So for all that T.E.O.R.E.M.A.T. may be something of a period piece, it's a reminder that even the discredited ideas of history (Pasolini was both a Catholic and a marxist) can have new things to show us.

One thing I appreciated about T.E.O.R.E.M.A.T. was its relentless thoroughness in documenting the characters' decline. The visitor leaves about half way through, and during the second half (though there is no interval) whenever you think things can't get any worse for the ones left behind – they do.

The play is mostly wordless, but towards the end words come thick and fast. Too quickly for me to really take in the subtitled text, enjoy those glorious consonant-rich Polish voices and absorb the sparse yet complex staging. Perhaps it didn't matter too much: the verbal imagery mirrored the aircraft take-off electronic sheen of the score, eventually sweeping away the debris of repression and existential crisis to leave us on a surprisingly optimistic note, with birds singing on the telephone wires and a plea – is this the real legacy of the 1960s? – to "Love, Love".

********

Press release: Powerhouse Play from Theatre Company TR Warszawa
Arts Festival website: T.E.O.R.E.M.A.T.
Scoop Full Coverage: Arts Festival 2010

© Scoop Media

Advertisement - scroll to continue reading

Are you licensed for Scoop?

Scoop is free for personal use, but you’ll need a licence for work use. This is part of our Ethical Paywall and how we fund Scoop without a regular paywall. Join today with plans starting from just $11 per month, and start using Scoop like a Pro.

Join Pro Individual Find out more

Find more from Richard Thomson on InfoPages.
 
 
 
Top Scoops Headlines

COMMENT


 

Martin LeFevre - Meditations: We Cannot Return And Recover As Humans; We Can Only Transcend As Human Beings

AI cannot be more intelligent than humans are, and people who believe it will save us without radically changing ourselves are deluding themselves.

Binoy Kampmark: Presidential Marxism - AKD And The Sri Lankan Elections

AKD’s presidential victory tickles and excites the election watchers for various reasons. He does not hail from any of the dynastic families that have treated rule and the presidential office as electoral real estate and aristocratic privilege.

Gordon Campbell: On The Government’s Bizarre Hostility To A Capital Gains Tax

Oyez oyez, Antonia Watson, CEO of the biggest bank in New Zealand has come out in favour of a capital gains tax!

Ramzy Baroud: War Of Legitimacy - How The ICJ, UNGA Challenged Decades Of Israeli, US Arrogance

UN resolutions are merely an expression of the balances of power that exist on the international stage. Therefore, Palestinians and their supporters should not expect that a UN resolution, binding or otherwise, will drive the Israeli military out of the West Bank and Gaza.

Binoy Kampmark: The Illusion Of A Solution - Killing Hassan Nasrallah

Another Nasrallah is bound to be in tow, with several others in incubation.

Binoy Kampmark: Zelenskyy Joins The US Election

The Ukrainian president has succeeded most brazenly in getting himself, and the war effort, into the innards of the US presidential election. In doing so, he has become an unabashed campaigner for the Democrats and the Kamala Harris ticket while offering uncharitable views about the Republicans. (Electoral interference, anyone?)

work Join Scoop Pro
 
Submit News
 
person_add Become a Member
 
 
 
  • Community Scoop
 
 
 
  • Wellington Scoop
 
 
 

Join Our Free Newsletter

Subscribe to Scoop’s 'The Catch Up' our free weekly newsletter sent to your inbox every Monday with stories from across our network.