dinsdag 5 oktober 2010

Authenticity & theatre



Saturday, the 25th of september, I visited a musictheatre performance about my subject. I thought it would be interesting to see what other people do with the subject and I thought it may help me in my research in some way. The play is called Onderhuids and is made by the theatre group the Fantasten.

ONDERHUIDS / UNDER YOUR SKIN is a physical musictheatre performance about social encounters and authenticity. We are all actors of our lives. Everyone uses different (sub)personalities every now and then. Sometimes consciously, like in social media. More often, however, unnoticed. For example when you’re standing in front of the mirror in the morning to decide which outfit you will wear, taking into account the agenda of the day.

Under your Skin is a mosaic of scenes that overlap, each demanding attention. In this schizophrenic maze, the four women desperately try to find out what is real and what is fake. The visually engaging scenes with live music, dance and theatre leave room for free association and above all, fantasy.


First of all I found the play was very beautiful, well acted, the women sung and danced very good as well. I found the play very intens too, I think because it was a very physical performance. What first struck me was the way the play started. The women all introduced themselfs by their real name. Which immediately gave a sence op authenticity, because they were not using 'character' names but just were themselfs and wanted to show this. Second was the way they dressed. In every scene they changed their clothes and all four women were wearing the same outfit every time, but all outfits were different too. For example: one time they all wore a red dress, but they all wore an other red dress; their own (authentic) red dress. The play showed the struggle of these four women to find their authentic self. Family and home were things they pointed out; things that make you who you are. The fact that some people pretend to be someone their not was also a fragment in the piece, qoute: "did you believe that or did she just made it up to look interesting?" The play ended with the conclusion: "It is what it is" and "staying easy".

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