There is a crack in everything--that's where the light gets through.Leonard Cohen |
BOUFFONS and the ECSTASY OF MOCKING
3 February, 2017 → 6 February, 2017 - Auckland, NEW ZEALAND-AOTEAROA
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The word Bouffon comes from a latin verb: buffare, to puff, to fill the cheeks with air, to deform oneself, to swell in order to provoke laughter. It seems to be a very old human practice. In fact, bouffons are direct descendants of the satyrs from Ancient Greek Satyric Drama.
The actual word "Bouffons" comes from French and it entered English theatrical language through the work of Jacques Lecoq.
The essence of the Bouffon is in the dynamic of MOCKING.
The MOCKER is a specific role, existing in all human societies. Bouffons represent elements of their society in an amplified, distorted or exaggerated way, thereby provoking laughter and outrage.
Their Mockery doesn't have an agenda in itself, because the Bouffons don’t have opinions, and they don’t protect any side from their mocking. They just mock everything and everybody. Their purpose is to have fun mocking humans and therefore they use everything they find, with ferocious ecstasy and jubilation. This is their power: they see and play with everything, they feed on human dynamics in order to play with it.
Bouffons never touch on individual or private themes, instead they take on big collective movements – involving the social complexity and the very essence of society and culture. Politics, religion, economy, power, money and finances, morality, war and the military, science, gender and race, ecology, family, education and school, cultural institutions…
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For Bouffon work to be possible, we need to be very well and precisely informed about the situation or themes that we are mocking, in order to see and then reveal what is hidden, what lies underneath – on the other side, in the shadow or the unspeakable. Nothing can be invented – all the movements and dynamics are documented and are based in authentic behaviors.
The actors need to collect facts, not opinions. Bouffons have no opinions or values. Actors, directors, writers and members of the audience do. That's why, as a theatre genre, Bouffon is often very provocative, because its very nature is to bring hidden things to the surface and to unmask the collective games lying behind events. This often includes the fact that the role of oppressor and victim are always intertwined.
Everybody in the audience gets scrambled by a bouffon piece, which can be often a bit difficult and or even unbearable. It’s not the Bouffons who are unbearable but the truth that they reveal about humanity, what is hidden, what lies underneath, on the other side, the grotesque of human society (grotesque comes from greek cryptos = hidden).
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THE BOUFFON FOLLY
- Play, action/reaction and fun
- The grotesque body: amplification, deformation, swelling and puffing
- The white bodies
- Engaged madness
- From children playing to Bouffon games
- The Bouffon “state” and the mocking eyes
THE DYNAMIC OF MOCKING
- The state of play: bands of Bouffons, rhythm, rituals
- The shapeshifting chorus
- How the Bouffons see the world: themes of play
- The Bouffons mocking the great themes of humanity
- How Bouffon relates to Tragedy, Melodrama and Clown
- Writing in the Grotesque Mode.
- Devising material for Bouffons.
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UNITEC
Carrington Road, Mount Albert, Auckland 1025, New Zealand
Studio to be announced
Early Bird registration: NZ$ 450 if full payment is sent by January 15th, 2016.
Full Price: NZ$ 530
Please note that tuition does not include accommodation: participants will be responsible for organizing their staying in Auckland.
To apply to the workshop please send Giovanni a brief letter of motivation by e-mail, sharing something about why you wish to attend this training. Once the application is accepted, applicants can confirm their enrollment by sending a NZ$ 200 non-refundable deposit.
For further information about the content of the workshop, and for applications
please contact Giovanni Fusetti
Photo credits
(1) Stefano Borghi for Helikos School, 2014
(2) Stefano Borghi for Helikos School, 2013
(3) Dell'Arte School of Physical Theatre, 2007
(4) Dell'Arte School of Physical Theatre, 2007
Design & programming : DomRadisson.net