Dom Juan au Théâtre du Trident
Théâtre du Trident
Germany, 1933-1938. In the streets, homes, schools, and courts, the regime subjugates an entire people. Through twenty-four striking scenes, Brecht and Steffin plunge the spectator into the heart of a daily life consumed by Nazi terror. A couple no longer dares to speak for fear of denunciation, a judge trembles at the thought of delivering a just verdict, a scientist must choose between their conscience and survival, children spy on their own parents. Each tableau is a fragment of raw reality, a window into the intimate mechanics of oppression, as experienced from the kitchens, streets, and everyday stages. And we discover, with chilling lucidity, how fear shapes, distorts, and corrupts ordinary people. Here, there are no heroes or grand speeches: just the naked truth of a world where cowardice becomes, by necessity, a survival strategy.
Art / Gallery
Free