FRINGE '04: Birthday - the clinic
po box 661
christchurch
http://www.theclinic.co.nz
“birthday”
On tiptoe through the
winter,
our mouths were full of summer
memories,
wearing inedible tinsel tutus
for the love
of spring
and the double chocolate cake
which made the
adults laugh with a shame
the children don't
understand,
lingering in doorways halfway to bedtime
in
pyjamas they don't want to wear.
In their autumn
years
they will begin to measure in beats and
breaths
and stray their hands for twinkle twinkle.
Too
late for dancing,
too early for dead trees
we pull a
long story out of our feet
and tiptoe tiptoe little
star,
remembering tutus too small for winter
sheep.
Proposed performance dates: Fri 12th 9pm, Sat
13th 8pm & 10pm, Sun 14th 8pm & 10pm, Mon 15th
9pm
Venue: WACT Studio
Tickets: The tickets will
be $12 / $9 / $8
Birthday:
“Birthday” is a collaboration between the clinic, sound artist Thomas Phillpotts and aerialiste Pipi-Ayesha Evans. Here, we are preoccupied with the process of remembering, of looking back along the long tail of the past and the strange colourful flowers we see there, through the lens of our idealisation and our pain.
These huge distortions come to life in a very theatrical manner: massive shadows are thrown along the white walls of the gallery; words, sounds and moments are squeezed and lengthened; and events like a favourite remembered birthday seem to last a whoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooole year.
The title “Birthday” reflects a new interest in births, deaths, and the measuring of life. We hope to explore the process of aging, the feeling of time speeding up and slowing down throughout life, from the first tentative steps we take as a tiny child to the loss of ability to walk in old age.
Directed by Lucette Hindin, the style of “Birthday” will hark back to the early work of the clinic (for example, “Synapse: Digging for Apples,” our first work, which premiered at the Wellington Fringe in 2000) – colourful, character-driven, a touch anarchic or grotesque, influenced by dancetheatre and art-house film.
the clinic
the clinic was established in 1999 by Lucette Hindin, Anastsia Dailianis and Haydn Kerr. Since then, the clinic has grown to a core group of five with a large network of affiliated actors and artists.
Over the past 3 years we have been creating original performances, touring and running workshops in Christchurch, Wellington, Dunedin and Leipzig, Germany. Our first work, Synapse: Digging for Apples won a Best for Theatre at the Wellington Fringe Festival in 2000, and the following year we won a Best Multimedia with The Forbidden Room. In 2001 we were also awarded the STAB commission (awarded by Bats theatre in Wellington for innovative work with performance and technology), and created Wild Night American Dream, which was nominated for a Chapman Tripp award.
the clinic is also currently working on the development for touring of a devised, multimedia work, The Peculiar Case of Clara Parsons, which premiered at the Christchurch Arts Festival in July 2003.
ENDS