Tag Archives: Les Théâtres de la Ville de Luxembourg.

FIGURES IN EXTINCTION

★★★★★

Edinburgh International Festival

FIGURES IN EXTINCTION

Edinburgh International Festival

★★★★★

“Figures in Extinction transcends story: it is a thesis danced, a living meditation on extinction, existence, renewal”

Act I

Dancers stand facing us. A single breath — then movement. Crystal Pite’s choreography speaks in precision, clarity, and the eloquence of gesture. A second breath, and they dissolve offstage.

Simon McBurney and Pite create the world of this work where words and movement merge. Where dance and theatre become a beautiful duet.

We enter a bestiary of absence: animals no longer among us, their names projected above the stage. They return in abstraction — a horn, a pecking head, hands becoming a shoal of fish. Curtains lift, architecture shifts, and creatures of air, land, and sea flicker briefly into being.

This is a mourning of what has vanished: animals, glaciers, lakes swallowed by history. A sly humour surfaces when a climate change denier appears — we wonder wryly when such figures might themselves go extinct.

We observe these apparitions, reminded that they once observed us, though we seldom notice. Pite moves forward and backward, gestures revisited and reframed, never bound by linearity. Great art is never straightforward.

Her language is movement: a reach of the hand, both subject and predicate, potent and symbolic. Time folds. This is a dance of the now, but also recalls early 20th-century choral forms, when space itself was a partner. Negative space dances as much as bodies do. Pite is a sculptor, freeing presence from stone.

A puppet cheetah, built of bones, crosses the stage — fragile yet regal, a monument to extinction.

The curtain descends.

Act II

Stillness. Dancers in chairs. A child whispers, When will they move? We are watching ourselves — humans transfixed by screens, fascinated with our own reflection.

A table becomes a mountain. Fluorescent light falls. A voice lectures on the brain — two hemispheres, divided yet yearning for union. A sudden ballet phrase bursts forth, tossed like a blossom in ikebana: startling, dissonant, necessary.

The stage fills with dancers in business suits. Thought collides with movement, the brain a battlefield of visions. Then, integration: a duet emerges, tender, immediate. Harmony is revealed not in division, but in union.

The world unravels — shifting lines of weight, collapsing order. Within the chaos, connection: a figure embraced, right and left merging. Urgency floods the stage. Balance arrives, fleeting, fragile. Humans, it seems, are but a “fluke in the universe.”

The curtain descends.

Act III

Street clothes. It is we who watch, not all humanity, only ourselves. A hospital bed. Doctors change sheets with ritual precision — one person’s grief, another’s work. This act confronts dying, loss, and the unseeable next.

Mozart’s Requiem reverberates. A vast black cube lowers, shadowing the stage like mortality itself. In the umbra, where no light reaches, we realize vision is only possible from the light we are given. At the penumbral threshold, we glimpse what lies beyond.

Decomposition unfolds: five stages of return to earth. The puppet cheetah reappears, then shatters — fragments dissolving into a landscape of grief. Solo dancers emerge, luminous, breakable. Repetition circles us back to the beginning — but now the extinctions are our own: loved ones, ourselves.

The curtain descends.

Coda

Few works of such ambition achieve coherence. This one does. Pite and McBurney are masters of gesture and space, weaving narrative into kinetic poetry, always exact, never indulgent, never distracted by itself. Figures in Extinction transcends story: it is a thesis danced, a living meditation on extinction, existence, renewal.

Twenty-four dancers from the Netherlands Dans Theatre inhabit this world with fierce commitment. Duets devastate with intimacy; solos mesmerize. Light, projection, and design conspire seamlessly, revealing the theatre as a collaborative art form. A reflective light backdrop descends, shimmering like the very idea of a ghost. Ethereal. Otherworldly.

If there is a flaw, it is in the ending, which circles and lingers with multiple closures. Yet within the sublime, lingering becomes forgiveness — or perhaps the point itself.

Genius.

 



FIGURES IN EXTINCTION

Edinburgh International Festival

Reviewed on 22nd August 2025 at the Festival Theatre

by Louis Kavouras

Photography by Andrew Perry

 

 

 

 

 

 

FIGURES IN EXTINCTION

FIGURES IN EXTINCTION

FIGURES IN EXTINCTION

WORKS AND DAYS

★★★★

Edinburgh International Festival

WORKS AND DAYS

Edinburgh International Festival

★★★★

“an intriguing work by a (literally) ground breaking theatre company”

Works and Days, a rumination on the vanished rituals of rural life, has just opened at the Royal Lyceum Theatre as part of the Edinburgh International Festival. This show is created by the Belgian theatre collective FC Bergman. The Antwerp based company’s production takes its inspiration from the Greek poet’s Hesiod’s work from around 700 BC. But if you arrive expecting dactylic hexameters proclaimed in Ancient Greek, this wordless, dreamlike show will upend your expectations. Hesiod is a starting point, as the vague echoes of Vivaldi’s Four Seasons weave in and out of the accompanying music.

FC Bergman (part of Toneelhuis since 2013) are well known for their extraordinary, site specific productions. The product that they build as part of the performance often dwarfs the figures of the performers on the stage. Founded in 2008, artists Stef Aerts, Joé Agemans, Thomas Verstraeten and Marie Vinck have worked together as directors, dramaturgs and set designers. They have created projects as diverse as building an entire village on stage in 300 el x 50 el x 30 el, to Terminator Trilogy performed on a site outdoors in the port of Antwerp. An ironic tone emerges in the work of FC Bergman as we watch the Promethean struggles of the performers battle it out within the constraints of time, space and their own physical limitations. In Works and Days, the cyclical function of farming work is celebrated in the rituals of ploughing, sowing, reaping and threshing. These processes are both recognizable, but also defamiliarized, taking place as they do on stage in a late nineteenth century theatre in the heart of downtown Edinburgh.

Each moment of defamiliarization is shocking, from watching the performers literally plough up the wooden floor of the stage, to seemingly beat a live chicken to death in a bag. FC Bergman’s talking points are emphatically made. Firstly that these ancient processes of producing food so that the community could survive is brutal work. Secondly, it also is work that cannot be done alone. Together, the audience watches the company create the calendar of farming life. The performers literally build the outlines of a barn, and raise it. They create an animal struggling to give birth out of the actors’ bodies, and pieces of cloth. The cycle of birth, life, and death is completed when they slaughter the animal in the same way. The yards of red cloth produced in the slaughter become a cloak to cover the calf (now magically transformed into a child) running around the barn the community has built.

Not content with creating the world that Hesiod describes in his ancient poem, FC Bergman continue to enlarge our perceptions of how human life has changed over the centuries. Humanity may have managed to survive by farming, but the arrival of the Industrial Age not only produced machines that could do the work formerly done by the community, it began to celebrate humans as individuals. Works and Days shows how the importance of community life recedes. The actors, entranced by a creature of smoke and steam that is puffing away in front of them, peer at its inner workings, mount its metal back, and bathe in the power which is produced not by human muscle, but burning fuel and water. Man is ironically empowered and diminished by this new age of the machine. The point is further underlined when we return to the age of the plough. But this scene, there is only one woman trying to drag the plough across the stage. She is further hampered by a pouring rainstorm. When she glimpses the machine, still puffing away in the background, she goes to investigate, but the machine ascends, out of reach. There are a few more surprises left in this show, which becomes increasingly surreal. Especially when we finally arrive in the age of cybernetics. It is clear that humans have forgotten much that used to sustain them not only in food, but in community life.

FC Bergman’s work is a curious combination of stylized movement and moments where they break into dance. The whole piece is accompanied by music (composed by Joachim Badenhorst and Sean Carpio) played live on stage on a variety of instruments. The performers’ transitions from era to era can be abrupt, and it takes a while to try and figure out where in the narrative we might be. Then there is the problem of seeing a production, both enormous in concept and build, somehow diminished on a stage in a conventional theatre space. It is convenient to sit in a comfortable seat in such a beautiful theatre, but how much more meaningful might the experience of Works and Days be performed outdoors?

This is an intriguing work by a (literally) ground breaking theatre company. If you enjoy theatrical experiences that challenge, Works and Days will be memorable. I’m certainly looking forward to following their work.



WORKS AND DAYS

Edinburgh International Festival

Reviewed on 7th August 2025 at Edinburgh Royal Lyceum Theatre

by Dominica Plummer

Photography by Kurt Van der Elst

 

 

 

 

 

 

WORKS AND DAYS

WORKS AND DAYS

WORKS AND DAYS