Photo: Gianmarco Bresadola, 2017
Photo: Gianmarco Bresadola, 2017 
Photo: Gianmarco Bresadola, 2017
Photo: Gianmarco Bresadola, 2017 
Photo: Gianmarco Bresadola, 2017
Photo: Gianmarco Bresadola, 2017 
Photo: Gianmarco Bresadola, 2017
Photo: Gianmarco Bresadola, 2017 
Photo: Gianmarco Bresadola, 2017
Photo: Gianmarco Bresadola, 2017 
Photo: Gianmarco Bresadola, 2017
Photo: Gianmarco Bresadola, 2017 
 

Democracy in America

by Romeo Castellucci (Cesena)
freely inspired by the book by Alexis de Tocqueville

Co-production during FIND 2017

04/08/2017, 20.00–22.15
In Italian with German and English surtitles

Followed by audience discussion

»This performance is not political. This performance is not so much a reflection on politics, as – if anything – on its end. In 1835, for the fi rst time, a European turns his eyes away from Athens. Alexis de Tocqueville witnesses the birth of the United States of America at the time when a new Democracy was being created from the seeds of the principles of Puritanism and a true equality among individuals. This implies the decline of Tragedy, understood politically as an awareness and comprehension of being. The great artificial laboratory of the negligence of being – tragedy – has thus been dismissed, forever. The vital and antibiotic experiment inherent in Athenian democracy has been relegated to the archive, along with the attempt – for the brief duration of a performance at the Theatre of Dionysus – to situate oneself beyond the limits of democracy itself, so as to listen, time and time again, to the dysfunction of existence, the lament of the expiatory victim, whom no politics is able – even today – to save. No more sacrifi ce, but still no politics. No more Gods, but still no city of man. The Scapegoat has been driven out, the knife has fallen out of our hands, and the sky is empty, new, blue and cold. All that remains is the empty ceremony that celebrates the grandeur of this loss.« Romeo Castellucci

In »Democracy in America«, one of the fundamental texts underpinning the contemporary Western world’s political vision, Tocqueville described a new model of representative democracy, even while pointing out its dangers, such as the tyranny of the majority, a weakening of intellectual freedom when faced with populist rhetoric, and the ambiguous relation between collective interests and individual ambitions. Romeo Castellucci (born in Cesena in 1960) follows his example and positions himself in a time, which precedes politics.

>>> Essay about the production in Pearson's Preview: What’s Gone Wrong in America? A Conversation with Romeo Castellucci

Executive production: Socìetas – Cesena A coproduction with: deSingel International Artcampus, Wiener Festwochen, Festival Printemps des Comédiens à Montpellier, National Taichung Theatre in Taichung (Taiwan), Holland Festival Amsterdam, Schaubühne Berlin, Festival d’Automne à Paris with MC93 Maison de la Culture de Seine-Saint-Denis à Bobigny, Le Manège – Scène nationale de Maubeuge, Teatro Arriaga Antzokia de Bilbao, São Luiz Teatro Municipal (Lisbon), Peak Performances Montclair State University (NJ-USA).
With the participation of: Théâtre de Vidy-Lausanne and Athens and Epidaurus Festival.

Direction , Set Design, Lighting Design, Costume Design: Romeo Castellucci
Texts: Romeo Castellucci
Duration: ca. 135 minutes

Choreography freely inspired by the folk traditions of Albania, Greece, Botswana, England, Hungary, Sardinia.

With thanks to Andreas Jandl for the translation of »The Useful Plough« by Benjamin Britten for the German surtitles.