The Greek world of gods is never-ending: universal tales retold throughout history branch far away and are still hold true to our society today. Many variants of these stories keep being alive at the same time, which is the very core of the mythological narrative. As writer Roberto Calasso said, “everything that happens, happens this way, or that way, or this other way. If, out of some perversity of tradition, only one version of some mythical event has come down to us, it is like a body without a shadow, and we must do our best to trace out that invisible shadow in our minds." It is in this multifaceted context that the space for artistic imagination emerges and the world of Ultima Vez unfolds.
Daniel Copeland and Lucy Black play the father/Zeus and the mother/Hera, who, appearing only on screen, remain distant, unreachable divine parents. At their side, the flamenco legend Israel Galván embodies the family’s best friend/Tiresias, the blind prophet who will communicate purely through rhythm and body language to the performers on stage.
Hephaestus is one of the main characters in Infamous Offspring, the god of fire and of forging, who as soon as he was born was already thrown from the Olympus and remained crippled. Due to his impairment, Hephaestus develops outstanding skills as the blacksmith of the gods. The rejected becomes then the skilled and the indispensable, the only worker. In the show, Hephaestus is portrayed by Iona Kewney, a Scottish painter and contortionist, who transposes the key features of the crippled fire god into an imaginative language. All the divine siblings are performed on stage by young international dancers, opening the gaze on Greek mythology to a broader, contemporary and universal approach.
Fiona Benson, a poet whose dark imagination is solemnly infused with lyricism, reworked the mythology and imagined the text for the performance. In her writings, such as Vertigo&Ghosts (winner of the prestigious Forward Prizes), the contemporary and the myth are always echoing each other. Infamous Offspring is her theatre debut: poetry, like dance, is an abstract form of conveying something without literally pronouncing it.
Like in several of his previous pieces (like Blush, Puur, Traptown), Wim Vandekeybus develops the visual narrationthrough several media: cinema coexists with stage performance, dance with spoken word. All these languages enhance and exalt each other for a unique and ever recognizable signature.
regie en choreografie
- Wim Vandekeybus
created with & performed by
- Iona Kewney
- Maria Zhi Tortosa Soriano
- Lotta Sandborgh
- Cola Ho Lok Yee
- Samuel Planas
- Rakesh Sukesh
- Paola Taddeo
- Adrian Thömmes
- Hakim Abdou Mlanao
film cast
- Lucy Black
- Daniel Copeland
- Thi-Mai Nguyen
- Cola Ho Lok Yee
- Iona Kewney
- Paola Taddeo
- Pieter Desmet
with special appearance in the role of Tiresias
- Israel Galvàn
text
- Fiona Benson
music
- Warren Ellis/Dirty Three
- ILA
sound design film
- Arthur Brouns
artistic assistant and dramaturgy
- Margherita Scalise
movement assistants
- Maria Kolegova
- Alexandros Anastasiadis
costume design
- Isabelle Lhoas
set design
- Wim Vandekeybus
realisation set and consultancy
- Schröder
- Pepijn Mesure
- KVS
sound engineer and live video operator
- Schröder
light design
- Wim Vandekeybus
- Benjamin Verbrugge
light on tour
- Benjamin Verbrugge
productieleidng
- Heleen Schepens
dispersion
- Julia Bouhjar
consultancy on mythologie
- Nadia Sels
thanks to
- Laura Aris
- Jerry Killick
- Magdalena Öttl
- Matteo Principi
- Louis Kubben
- Thi-Mai Nguyen
photography
- Wim Vandekeybus
- Danny Willems
production
- Ultima Vez
coproduction
- Teatro Comunale Di Ferrara
- KVS
- Les Théâtres de la Ville de Luxembourg
with the support of
- de Tax Shelter van de Belgische federale overheid
- Casa Kafka Pictures Tax Shelter powered by Belfius