Synopsis Lipsynch is an epic panorama that spreads from the middle of the 20th century to 2010 as one character holds the centre in an unfolding myriad of stories that discover how all of our lives are intertwined. Sweeping from extreme pathos to outrageous comedy, Lipsynch takes in scenes of war-torn Vienna, pre-revolutionary Nicaragua and contemporary Tenerife, Quebec and Newcastle-upon-Tyne. Part 1: 9 Sep. Part 2: 10 Sep. Part 3: 11 Sep. Running time: Each part approx 3 hours including interval. In English, French, and Spanish with English surtitles. Weekend Cycles Sep 6,7,13,14 Performance time: 13:00. Running time: Approx 9 hours including 4 intervals and 1 extended meal break. BITE:08
Robert Lepage’s new nine-act epic Lipsynch featuring nine actors covers continents and inter-locking life stories with an ease, charm and brilliance that is totally beguiling, but the whole nine-hour-event – well under seven hours of theatre, with copious intervals – is an exercise in theatrical sleight-of-hand that exploits the medium in a way both exemplary and unprecedented.
The title correctly implies that the main theme is the dubbing of sound on a silent screen – or, indeed, a silent scream – and you could look at Lipsynch as a sophisticated update on the movie Singin’ in the Rain, where the coming of the talkies in cinema is the subject of comedy and delight.
But Lepage also embraces newer technologies of the dubbing studio along with stories of speech therapy, the voice-over culture in advertising and international cinema, the transcendent quality of music and the business of simply finding your own voice. The production itself, sets operated by an army of black-clad stage-hands, is an amazing physical and logistical achievement which defines the voice and timbre of the narrative.
We start in the sky. An illegal immigrant from Nicaragua dies on a flight from Montreal to Frankfurt; her baby is charitably adopted by an opera singer (Rebecca Blankenship), who becomes embroiled with a border guard in Frankfurt. The child, Jeremy (Rick Miller), grows up to make a film about his own story, a fantastically funny and ingenious fourth act which turns into something dreamt up by Truffaut and Almodovar.
En route, as it were – and watch out for the underground scene on the Piccadilly line - Jeremy graduates from Schumann to heavy rock. And as Thomas (Hans Piesbergen), the part-time border guard, develops his career as a neurologist, so the story pans out to include his treatment of a jazz singer (Frederike Bedard) with a brain tumour; that singer’s mentally ill sister’s solace in literature in a Quebec bookshop; and a murder mystery after a radio newsreader disowns his sex worker sister (Sarah Kemp).
It all loops round to a brutal revelation of the Nicaraguan mother’s fate in the sex slave industry, the subject of another documentary drama that leads to a final pieta of reconciliation and transfiguration. The staging is breathtaking: one minute, we can see the polyphonic laying down of musical lines on a big screen as it is performed; the next, the farcical despatch of a still-farting corpse in an over-occupied crematorium.
Finally, there is the beautiful, ironic metaphor of a stage performance giving concrete imagery to the babble of sound (we hear four languages, there are sur-titles throughout) and the manufacture of artificial substitutes in the search for explanation and perfection. There are two more complete cycles next weekend, and a performance spread over three evenings this week.
This is the 20th Robert Lepage production I’ve seen in the last 23 years. This has included concert staging for Peter Gabriel, Shakespeare plays, operas and songspiel; but at the heart of his output is devised work like this, of which I’ve been lucky enough to see 10 - two of them in different incarnations, 2 and 20 years apart respectively. This devised piece breaks the previous record for length by almost 3 hours, running at 8 hrs 40 mins including a couple of hours worth of breaks. It consists of 9 acts in five parts in four languages, each act centred on a different character with just nine actors playing all of the parts. The technical team required to co-ordinate the lighting, sound and set changes is considerably bigger; which you realise when they pour onto the stage to take a bow! The concept is to explore voice, speech and language. The story takes as its starting point a young Nicaraguan girl who’s uncle sells her to a German pimp after her parents die, but this is the last act ! Before this we see her die on a plane leaving an orphan in the hands of an opera singer who eventually adopts him. She marries and divorces someone who helps her trace him. He re-trains as a neurologist and marries a patient who is involved in dubbing the debut film of the orphan. Her sister has a mental illness from which she recovers enough to return to her bookshop…..It isn’t as inventive as his best work, and some of the connections and diversions don’t work well enough, but there are captivating moments of theatrical magic. In truth, there is a 3-hour masterpiece crying to get out, and it’s a case of less would be more. However, I don’t begrudge one minute of the nine hours I spent at the Barbican and feel priviledged to have witnessed another of this genius’ theatrical experiments. - Gareth James
18 Sep 08
Lepage is a genius of the theatre. No-one else has anything like his creative imagination and abilities. This is a remarkable piece which deserves every award available. - fred
10 Sep 08
What an evening, one of the most stunning theatre evnts I ever saw. Thanks to You, Lepage, and your brillant cast ! - Peter McMillan
09 Sep 08
An extraordinary theatrical event. The nine acts gradually wove together the lives of nine different people. So many things to think about afterwards about language, relationships, communications. The nine hours flew by for me. - Gill Gorvett
08 Sep 08
An extraordinary theatrical event. The nine acts gradually wove together the lives of nine differet people. So many things to think about afterwards about language, relationships, communications. The nine hours flew by for me. - Gill Gorvett
08 Sep 08
I saw (or sat through) the first day's performance of Lipsynch yesterday - all 9 hours. The nine acts (in six parts) vary in quality from the first act which was brilliant to the eighth act - tedious & could easily have been left out.
Overall this is a brilliant piece of work with great use of music (but some early technical issues) but if you have the stamina it's well worth staying to the end for. you'll probably not see anything like it again. - Jonathan Tanner
See also The Pit. Opened 1982. The Barbican is home to the internationally acclaimed bite programme, featuring a diverse range of the most exciting new theatre, dance and music from around the world. Bite has established firm relationships with leading international artists and its impressive list of Artistic Associates includes; Deborah Warner, Michael Clark Company, Cheek by Jowl, Fabulous Beast and Afroreggae UK Partnership. Whilst continuing to support the work of established companies, bite seeks to enable young and emerging artists to present work at the Barbican. Recent bite seasons have included music from the favelas of Rio, Shakespeare from Japan, an Icelandic Peer Gynt, puppetry from Canada, traditional dance from Cambodia and cabaret from South London. Bite work extends beyond the 1166-seat Barbican Theatre and the 200-seat Pit into non-traditional spaces, often blurring the boundaries between performer and audience and enabling an even greater number of people to enjoy its programme.
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