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Personnes handicapées et personnes âgées : ces deux groupes appartiennent à des mondes qui partagent un même constat : la dépossession de leur sexualité. La crise sanitaire du Covid-19 a notamment accentué, plus que jamais, leur isolement. À partir d’un solide travail de documentation et de collecte de témoignages, Renelde Pierlot propose deux parcours déambulatoires et intimistes dans les coulisses du Escher Theater, afin de dévoiler ces deux mondes. Pour le spectateur, il n’est pas question de s’assoir comme de coutume dans un fauteuil, mais de vivre la promiscuité en compagnie des protagonistes – toute distance sanitaire gardée – et de s’approcher au plus près de leur intimité. Voir la feuille à l’envers rend ainsi à ces individus trop vite oubliés leur humanité.
Entrée gratuite sur réservation. Déambulatoire, le spectacle requiert le port d’un masque et de chaussures confortables.
Based on unpublished testimonies, this poignant show explores the daily life of French, Belgian, German and Luxembourg women who cross the borders of the Grand Duchy day after day. The border reality is revealed to us in all its human density.
Once upon a time, there was a deep forest, in a country that could be a region of Poland, Russia, why not Lorraine. It doesn't matter. Every day, a train goes mechanically through the thickness of the great wood. You can quickly guess its destination...
Canceled
New York 4 December 1975, Hannah Arendt is working on her book The Life of the Mind. A little girl suddenly appears in her room and introduces herself as "a Hannah too". She wants to know from the old Hannah what she is doing there. Is she thinking up words?
It's a terrible thing, a family. Do you dare to complain? If you do, you are wisely put back in your place. Do you want to speak out? It's a waste of effort. Do you want to distance yourself? Perfectly illusory...
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