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#PlayBack: “Orchidee” by Pippo Delbono

ORCHIDEE (Orchids)
conceived and directed by Pippo Delbono

 

 

Pippo Delbono // Orchidee (2013) from Emilia Romagna Teatro Fondazione on Vimeo.

 

“I still can write of love”, Dario Bellezza, a poet, great friend of Pier Paolo Pasolini, once wrote as AIDS was killing him. The orchid is the most beautiful flower and the most wicked as well, a friend once told me, because you cannot tell the real one from its fake. The same is true of this our time. In Orchids, as in all my shows, there is an attempt to stop the time I’m living through. To stop my time and that of my company, the people who’ve been with me many years now, but also the time we all are living in – Italians, Europeans, citizens of the world.
A time of confusion in which I, we, many of us, I believe, feel lost… Feeling like something has been lost. Forever. Maybe it is our faith, our political, revolutionary, human, spiritual faith. Orchids also came from the great sense of emptiness I was left with when my mother went away for ever. My mother, with whom I had newly grown closer, after our conflicts, our separations, we had become friends once again. I had grown, I was a little wiser, and she had become more child-like growing old. Hence, the void. I was obody’s child anymore. Bereft of love. Orchids was born of many voids, though, many abandonments.

The cultural void we experience, our being lost as artists. Theatre, that for the most part feels like a dusty, false, dead place to me. The accepted lie of theatrical representation. But Orchids also deals with the vital urge to fill that void. It deals with the urge to keep searching – new mothers, new fathers, new life, new stories.
Then, unexpectedly, theatre’s ‘important’ words, that I was determined to leave behind, came back and stuck to me, revealing a whole new meaning as they wedged into my life. And my life has become, perhaps, thanks to those words, the life of many others. I believe Orchids represents to me that vital, uncontainable urge to keep writing and speaking, in spite of all, about love.
Pippo Delbono

With: Dolly Albertin, Gianluca Ballarè, Bobò, Pippo Delbono, Ilaria Distante, Simone Goggiano, Mario Intruglio, Nelson Lariccia, , Julia Morawietz, Gianni Parenti, Pepe Robledo, Grazia Spinella
Images and films Pippo Delbono lights Robert John Resteghini
Music by Enzo Avitabile and Deep Purple, Miles Davis, Philip Glass, Victor Démé, Joan Baez, Nino Rota, Angélique Ionatos, Wim Mertens, Pietro Mascagni

Pippo Delbono, author, actor, and director, was born in Varazze in 1959. He begins training in traditional theatre, then, in Denmark, he studies the principles of oriental theatre, through a rigorous work on body and voice. Later, in Germany, he’s invited by Pina Bausch to follow her work.

At the beginning of the 1980s he founded Pippo Delbono Company, creating most of his works with this group, from Il tempo degli assassini (1987) to Vangelo (2015). He does not stage plays but, rather, total creations, devised with a stable group of actors whose number has grown through the years.
The encounter with socially rejected people determines a turning point in his poetical research: that’s how Barboni (1997) was born. Some of these actors – among them Bobò, deaf-mute, who had been kept in an asylum in Aversa, near Naples, for forty-five years – have kept working with the company and are still a central part of this experience. The works that followed – La rabbia dedicated to Pasolini, Guerra, Esodo, Gente di plastica, Urlo, Il silenzio, Questo buio feroce, La menzogna, Racconti di giugno, Orchidee – like the ones before- have been performed worldwide in more than fifty countries, in theatres and festivals, including Festival d’Avignon (where almost all of the company’s creations were presented), Barcelona’s Grec, Theater Spektakel in Zurich, Venice Biennale, Wienerfestwochen in Wien etc. Several theatres, including Théâtre du Rond-Point in Paris, have shown retrospectives of his work and co-produced his creations in the past years and every year present the new works of the company. Enrico V – his only creation based on an existing play – is the only Italian production of Shakespeare that has ever been invited to perform at the Royal Shakespeare Company. Pippo Delbono has also been investigating the language of film for many years now. In 2003, following a tour in Israel and Palestine, he shot Guerra, presented at the Venice International Film Festival and winner of the David di Donatello award as best documentary. His second film, Grido (2006), has been shown at the Rome International Film Festival and won the award as best interpretation for Delbono and Bobò at cinema Festival of Reel in Lecce.
In 2009 he directs La paura filmed entirely with a cellular phone, transferred to film by Bologna Cinematheque and presented in the official selection at the 2009 Locarno Film Festival, alongside a retrospective of his work, including film versions of Il silenzio and Questo buio feroce. In June 2013 his film Amore carne, (grand prize at the Nyon Film Festival, in Switzerland in 2011), was distributed in Italy and France, after a preview at the 68th Venice International Film Festival in 2011, in the section Orizzonti. It has been reviewed by Le Monde between the best films of the year 2011. His short film Blu Sofa, co-directed with Lara Fremder and Giuseppe Baresi, was awarded the grand prize at the Clermont Ferrand festival.
Sangue was the only Italian movie presented at the 66th Festival of Locarno in August 2013, where it won the International Federation of Film Societies award, at Lisboa Doc Festival where it won the Honorable Mention and at the Zagreb Film Festival where it won the Grand Prize of the audience. The short film La Visite with Michael Lonsdale and Bobò, completely shot in Versailles for the Ministry of French Culture, has been presented at the International Days of Films on Art at Louvre (Paris) in 2016 and won the most important awards at Cinema Festival of Reel in Lisboa and in Rio de Janeiro.
The Rochelle Festival has dedicated in 2014 an homage to his cinema showing all his films and Wroclaw, European Capital of Culture for 2016, has presented the same retrospective in July 2016.
As an actor, he appears in Io sono l’amore by Luca Guadagnino, Io e te by Bernardo Bertolucci, Goltzius and the Pelican Company by Peter Greenaway, Henri by Yolande Moreau, Un Chateau en Italie by Valeria Bruni Tedeschi, Henri by Yolande Moreau, Pulce non c’è by Giuseppe Bonito, Transeurope hotel by Luigi Cinque, Cha Cha Cha by Marco Risi, Più bui di mezzanotte by Sebastiano Riso, Gli Uraniani by Gianni Gatti, United Passions by Frédéric Auburtin, Le ombre della sera by Valentina Esposito, La casa delle stati lontane by Shirel Amitay and others. For Teatro Sperimentale of Spoleto, he directed the opera Studio per obra maestra (2007), for Théâtre Wielski in Poznan (Poland) Don Giovanni (2014) and for the Teatro San Carlo of Naples, Cavalleria rusticana (2012) and Madama Butterfly (2014).
In 2011 he devised Rosso Bordeaux, presented at Place de la Comédie in Bordeaux as part of Evento, a festival directed by Michelangelo Pistoletto with the choir and the orchestra of the city and films projected on the walls of the palace on the square. In the same year, Residenztheater in Munich calls him as a guest director: Erpressung (blackmail) is the first creation with actors that are not part of his company. It premiered in Munich on January 14, 2012 and has become part of the theatre’s repertory.
With the violinist Alexander Balanescu he conceives the concert Amore carne, with the Italian singer Petra Magoni and the musician Ilaria Fantin Il Sangue, on Oedipus by Sofocle, with the singer from Naples Enzo Avitabile the concert Bestemmia d’amore, and La notte with texts from Francois and Bernard-Marie Koltès and François Koltès and with the guitarist PieroCorso.
He published Barboni – Pippo Delbono’s Theatre with Ubulibri. For Actes Sud editions he published Mon Theatre (published in Romania with the title “Teatrul Meu”), Récits de Juin and Regards. For the editor Les Solitaires Intempestifs Le Corps de L’Acteur; for Punto Aparte El teatro de la rabia; for Garzanti Racconti di giugno and for Barbès Corpi senza menzogna and Dopo la battaglia – poetical/ political writings; for Edizioni Clichy Sangue. Dialogo tra un artista buddista e un ex terrorista tornato in libertà and L’uomo caduto sulla terra; a lot of books have been written and published by other authors on his theatrical and cinematographic experience. He regularly publishes articles in different newspapers such as Liberazione and L’Humanité and magazines, such as Il Venerdì di Repubblica. He has been awarded, among other prizes, the special Ubu prize for Barboni, the Critic’s Prize for Guerra, the Olympic Prizes for Theatrical Innovation for Gente di plastica and Urlo, and in Wroclaw, Poland, in 2009, he received the Europe Prize New Theatrical Realities. The performance Dopo la battaglia, with the participation of the violinist Alexander Balanescu and the Paris Opera Étoile Marie-Agnès Gillot, won the 2011 Ubu prize as best play.
His creation Orchids premiered in May 2013 at Luciano Pavarotti Theatre in Modena as part of the 9th edition of VIE Festival and it’s still on tour in Italy and abroad. He presented at Maison Rouge in Paris, an important contemporary art gallery, his exposition Ma mère et les autres that will be presented at Beaubourg Centre Pompidou together with all his films.