Tag Archives: Maria Casarès

THÉÂTRE DE LA VILLE AT UCLA

It’s an active week in Los Angeles for international theater of resistance. In addition to Redcat’s presentation of Mateluna, CAP UCLA is bringing in the THÉÂTRE DE LA VILLE production of Albert Camus L’ETAT DE SIÈGE for two nights.

Camus’ piece—an allegory about authoritarian corruption, with original mise en scène by Jean-Louis Barrault—was originally staged in 1948. This new production, directed by Emmanuel Demarcy-Mota, will complete its current U.S. tour at the Brooklyn Academy of Music next month.

 

THÉÂTRE DE LA VILLE—L’ETAT DE SIÈGE / THE STATE OF SIEGE, Thursday and Friday, October 26 and 27, at 8 pm.

ROYCE HALL, 10745 Dickson Court, UCLA, Los Angeles.

cap.ucla.edu/calendar/details/state_of_siege_fri

From top: Jean-Louis Barrault, Maria Casarès, and Albert Camus in 1948; Théâtre de la ville production of L’état de siège/The State of Siege, by Albert Camus. Théâtre de la ville image credit: France Inter.

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Théâtre de la ville's production of Albert Camus' L'état de Siège/The State of Siege. Image crdit: France Inter

 

JEAN COCTEAU AT CINEFAMILY

Jean Marais in Orphée, directed by Jean Cocteau Image: Pop Classics

Jean Marais in Orphée, directed by Jean Cocteau
Image: Pop Classics

Jean Cocteau—perfectly suited to the visual medium of mirrors, dreams, and life after death—was a filmmaker for three decades, but his greatest engagement took place during the five years immediately following the end of the Second World War, a period which began with one masterpiece (LA BELLE ET LA BÊTE, 1945) and ended with another—ORPHÉE.

Cocteau’s perennial star Jean Marais takes the title role, and the film features François Périer, Edouard Dermithe, Juliette Greco, and a cameo by Jean-Pierre Melville (who directed the film of Cocteau’s novel LES ENFANTS TERRIBLES the same year.) Death is played by Maria Casarès—the great star of Bresson’s LES DAMES DU BOIS DE BOULOGNE—and her henchmen in wide leather cummerbunds attend to their errands on motorcycle.

ORPHÉE is dedicated to the artist and designer Christian Bérard, who died while the film was in pre-production.

The closest the cinema has ever got to poetry.” — Leslie Halliwell on ORPHÉE

 

ORPHÉE / ORPHEUS  (1950, Jean Cocteau)—in 35 mm—Saturday, March 18 at 3 pm.

CINEFAMILY AT THE SILENT MOVIE THEATRE, 611 North Fairfax, Los Angeles.

cinefamily.org