"Breathtaking... a dazzling piece of theater"
–The Guardian
“This is active, arresting drama…exceptional”
–The Washington Post
Legendary British director Peter Brook's colossal 1985 production of The Mahabharata is hailed as one of the greatest and most memorable theatrical productions of all time. Now based in France, Brook comes together with frequent collaborators Marie-Helene Estienne and Jean-Claude Carriere to once again take inspiration from this sweeping epic poem of ancient India.
The Mahabharata is not simply a book, nor a great series of books, it is an immense canvas covering all the aspects of human existence. In it we find all the questions of our lives, in a way that is at once contemporary and urgent.
Over many thousands of years, the Mahabharata shows us, in an always-unexpected way, how to open our eyes to what reality demands.
The Mahabharata speaks of a great war of extermination, which tears apart the Bharata family. On one side there are 5 brothers, the Pandavas, and on the other side their cousins, the Kauravas, the hundred sons of the blind King Dritarashtra. Both sides use terrible weapons of destruction. At the end, the Pandavas win. Millions of dead bodies lie on the ground. And now the eldest of the Pandavas – Yudishtira - is compelled to become King. The victory has the bitter taste of defeat. Both Yudishtira and Dritarashtra, the old King, are in deep distress and remorse, questioning their past actions, trying to unravel their own responsibility for the disaster.
How, having to live with this terrible massacre, having lost their sons, their families, their allies, will the new King and the old one find an inner peace?
The richness of the language of this timeless epic, and its always astonishing stories, allow us to bring to the stage this situation, which, belonging to the past, reflects at the same time the harsh conflicts of today.
Performance: Carole Karemera, Jared McNeill, Ery Nzaramba and Sean O’Callaghan
Musician: Toshi Tsuchitori