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Chained Bodies - A Final Year Showcase
This is a Final Year Showcase from Theatre students at UCC. Chained Bodies explores themes of entrapment and struggle.
This event is Free but Ticketed - Booking Essential
Tickets available via https://www.eventbrite.ie/e/chained-bodies-tickets-591851974187
CHAINED BODIES鈥
鈥 is the title chosen by this year鈥檚 group of Final Year students from the UCC Department of Theatre for their Performance Projects. Their task has been to take a previously published short story, poem, myth or legend of their choice and adapt it for the 20-minute piece of theatre. What might seem like a straightforward task on the face of it is complicated by the study of Linda Hutcheon鈥檚 A Theory of Adaptation, which rejects the notion of fidelity to the original as a measure of the validity and success of the adaptation or as a key to understanding. The original text becomes a pretext for devising and the final result may or may not be faithful and may not even attempt to re-tell the story. A fragment may be taken and expanded, or a theme questioned, or the story told from a different perspective. Central to the task, however, is that the adaptation should work as a piece of theatre in its own right and make sense to an 鈥榰nknowing audience鈥, that is, those who have no knowledge of the adapted text, as well as to a 鈥榢nowing audience鈥, who will find pleasure in the variations and deviations from the story they are familiar with. For the latter, as Hutcheon argues, 鈥榬epetition without replication鈥 is key to the pleasure we derive from adaptations. Although the pieces are being assessed as part of the students鈥 degree programme, this event also showcases the original, self-led pieces by our emerging theatre practitioners.
A common thread running through the three pieces that make up CHAINED BODIES is the constraints that are imposed upon human beings 鈥 by others, by ourselves or by fate... We hope you enjoy the work!
鈥楲鈥檋omme est n茅 libre, et partout il est dans les fers.鈥
Jean Jacques Rousseau
AN CORP脕N (adapted from 鈥楾eig O鈥橩ane and the Corpse鈥, by Ernest Rhys, English translation by Dr Douglas Hyde)
鈥 explores a world where our own choices 鈥 be they good or bad 鈥 are the very making of us, where it can have unforetold consequences to take everything in the 鈥榬eal world鈥 for granted. When Teig鈥檚 actions bring him into contact with the supernatural, we鈥檙e prompted to wonder how far a man will carry his burdens in order to put them to rest and earn his redemption.
Briste Gaeilge Productions: Bridget Brabazon, Morgan Comerford, Fern Kealy, Daniel McCarthy
THE HAPPY PLACE (adapted from 鈥楾he Ones Who walk away from Omelas鈥, by Ursula K. LeGuin)
鈥 is a modern adaptation of Ursula K. Le Guin鈥檚 The Ones Who Walk Away From Omelas. The prosperity and excess of The Happy Place appears perfectly utopian on the surface, but is everything as it seems? We look into the lives of its citizens as they contemplate a difficult decision that can change everyone and everything they know. They must face the uncomfortable realities that support their way of life, and decide what they鈥檙e willing to live with..
18 Peaks Productions: Danielle Aherne, Ciara Caball, Francis Lim
CRAVING (adapted from 鈥楾he Hunger Artist鈥 by Franz Kafka)
The artist is hungry. For love. For achievement. For attention. For the dreamed body.
Is it right? Is it wrong? How much can we push our limits?
Do it. Don鈥檛 stop. You can be anything.
Let鈥檚 build a puppet.
The Red Group: Felix Akir, Leon De Bruijn, Ryan Farrimond, Stine Hulgard, Lilla Kedves, Andrea Martinez
Final Year Projects Coordinator and Mentor: Bernadette Cronin
Production Manager: Aoife Clarke
Stage Manager: Karizma Garcia
Tech Module Coordinator: Fionn Woodhouse
Technical Manager & Lighting Design: Declan Leonard
Technical Assistant: Ben Burns
Press Officer and Curator of Granary Foyer Exhibition: Madhura Sengupta