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UID:calendarize-speak-so-i-may-see-you-theater-der-welt-20260705
DTSTAMP:20260317T071959Z
DTSTART:20260705T160000Z
DTEND:20260705T164500Z
SUMMARY:Speak So I May See You | THEATER DER WELT
DESCRIPTION:Duration: 45 minInformation: In Arabic with German and English
  translation\nA group of people wander through a stage space. It is consta
 ntly changing. The audience follows the desperate search of the lost peopl
 e with excitement and could suspect that the people are blind. This is no
 t communicated. The group obviously doesn't know where they are. Or do the
 y? The title Speak So I May See You invites you into an original setting 
 and serves as a game guide. To see or not to (be able to) see? To hear and
  not to hear (be able to) hear? Saudi Arabian theatre-maker Yousef Ahmed 
 Alharbi offers a theatrical experimental set-up in which the confusion bet
 ween perception and truth\, deception and disappointment is the driving fo
 rce and disappointment is the driving force behind a tragic plot. In this 
 way\, he playfully examines the control mechanisms used to create hierarch
 ies\, orders and ultimately authoritarian power verticals Power verticals.
 Whether the audience experiences a parable about blind allegiance and the 
 dangers of outsourcing responsibility - or quite the opposite - is open to
  interpretation.The fact that the audience perceives a different world to 
 the people on stage is a theatre moment that is as simply staged as it is 
 astonishing. This extraordinary work was created in Saudi Arabia\, a count
 ry whose theatre culture is almost unknown in Europe. It is well known tha
 t Saudi Arabia is an authoritarian country. The production aims to bring u
 nseen things about people to life\, from a country that only became access
 ible to travellers a few years ago.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p>Duration: 45 min<br />Information: In Arab
 ic with German and English translation</p>\n<p>A group of people wander th
 rough a stage space. It is constantly changing. The audience follows the d
 esperate search of the lost people with excitement and could&nbsp\;<br />s
 uspect that the people are blind. This is not communicated. The group obvi
 ously doesn't know where they are. Or do they?&nbsp\;<br />The title Speak
  So I May See You invites you into an original setting and serves as a gam
 e guide. To see or not to (be able to) see? To hear and not to hear&nbsp\;
 <br />(be able to) hear? Saudi Arabian theatre-maker Yousef Ahmed Alharbi 
 offers a theatrical experimental set-up in which the confusion between per
 ception and truth\, deception and disappointment is the driving force and 
 disappointment is the driving force behind a tragic plot. In this way\, he
  playfully examines the control mechanisms used to create hierarchies\, or
 ders and ultimately authoritarian power verticals Power verticals.<br />Wh
 ether the audience experiences a parable about blind allegiance and the da
 ngers of outsourcing responsibility - or quite the opposite - is open to i
 nterpretation.<br />The fact that the audience perceives a different world
  to the people on stage is a theatre moment that is as simply staged as it
  is astonishing. This extraordinary work was created in Saudi Arabia\, a c
 ountry whose theatre culture is almost unknown in Europe. It is well known
  that Saudi Arabia is an authoritarian country. The production aims to bri
 ng unseen things about people to life\, from a country that only became ac
 cessible to travellers a few years ago.</p>
LOCATION:Spinnbau\, puppet theatre
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