The annual ‘birthing room’ drama festival sets out to encourage the emergence of new Peruvian plays and authors. It features a cycle of dramatised readings of unpublished texts, a programme of national and international performances and free workshops.
The participants in the 2016 edition are: 'Non Solum' (Spain: Jorge Picó and Sergi López), 'Dínamo' (Argentina: Claudio Tolcachir, Lautaro Perotti and Melisa Hermida), 'Castigo' (Chile: Cristián Plana), 'La ira de narciso' (Uruguay: Sergio Blanco), 'Mendoza' (Mexico: Juan Carrillo), 'Sobre Lobos' (Peru: Mariana Silva) and ‘Salir’ (Peru: Daniel Amaru).
AC/E is supporting the play 'Non solum' by Jorge Picó and Sergi López, which is due to be performed as part of the programme at Lima’s Teatro Pirandello on 3 and 4 September.
‘The play is very difficult to explain but very easy to watch’, points out Sergi López, actor and co-author of ‘Non solum’: a one-man show performed by one of Spain’s most renowned theatre and cinema actors. In it López plays a host of characters who, in response to a demiurge tweeter, progressively gather in a non-place until it is bursting at the seams. With brilliant humour, the production approaches timeless themes such as public powers, corruption, women, identity and death. But always through questions… without answers.
The participants in the 2016 edition are: 'Non Solum' (Spain: Jorge Picó and Sergi López), 'Dínamo' (Argentina: Claudio Tolcachir, Lautaro Perotti and Melisa Hermida), 'Castigo' (Chile: Cristián Plana), 'La ira de narciso' (Uruguay: Sergio Blanco), 'Mendoza' (Mexico: Juan Carrillo), 'Sobre Lobos' (Peru: Mariana Silva) and ‘Salir’ (Peru: Daniel Amaru).
AC/E is supporting the play 'Non solum' by Jorge Picó and Sergi López, which is due to be performed as part of the programme at Lima’s Teatro Pirandello on 3 and 4 September.
‘The play is very difficult to explain but very easy to watch’, points out Sergi López, actor and co-author of ‘Non solum’: a one-man show performed by one of Spain’s most renowned theatre and cinema actors. In it López plays a host of characters who, in response to a demiurge tweeter, progressively gather in a non-place until it is bursting at the seams. With brilliant humour, the production approaches timeless themes such as public powers, corruption, women, identity and death. But always through questions… without answers.