Forked lightning glimpsed through an aeroplane window, a silken dancer spilling stars in a snow-filled sky, a dragon tattoo etched on a man’s back: we’ve grown to expect seductive alchemy of images from the work of Quebecois master of visual theatre Robert Lepage, and in his latest show he doesn’t disappoint.
Chinese calligraphy – the writing of language that depicts what it expresses, in its shape on the page as much as in its meaning – runs as a theme through the drama, and is symbolic of the frequent paucity of spoken eloquence to convey true feelings and desires. Fiftysomething Pierre Lamontagne (Lepage himself, pictured right), who in The Dragons’ Trilogy declared his intention to go to China, has here been true to his word, and has opened an art gallery in Shanghai. His own name – which translates from French as Stone Mountain – makes him feel an inadequate successor to his father, a mere pebble to his mighty peak. A foreigner in a country he scarcely understands, and threatened with expropriation in a burgeoning city and ruthlessly expanding economy, the last thing Pierre needs is a visit from his ex-wife, Claire (Michaud), who has come to China in the hope of adopting a child – particularly when he’s about to mount an exhibition of work by his young Chinese lover, Xiao Ling (Tai Wei Foo). Like China, and like the Yangtze River which divides into three, and where, traditionally, desperate women cast away unplanned babies to meet their fate, Pierre, confronting late middle age, faces a parting of the ways of his destiny, and a challenging choice about how to live the rest of his life.- The Blue Dragon at the Barbican Theatre until 26 February
- Read theartsdesk Q&A with Robert Lepage
- See what's on at the Barbican Centre. Read Barbican reviews.
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