Lazzi
experimental
arts unit is dedicated to bold experimentation and a highly
improvisational style. Formed in 2000 by artistic director David W W
Johnstone, and based in Edinburgh, Scotland, the company has garnered a
reputation for innovation with its striking and original theatre work.
Previous productions include Witkacy
Idiota (2005) and Aurora
Borealis (2007).
Oresteia
continues the creative
performance partnership of David W W Johnstone and Sandy Grierson last
seen in Lazzi's acclaimed Witkacy
Idiota.
'It's a sheer joy to come
across a performance so sweetly, confidently and unashamedly absurdist...
a simple but surprisingly beautiful-looking show' Joyce (McMillan, The
Scotsman)
'The performances are flawless, this challenging piece of mime in the
style of Polish avant garde theatre is a unique experience. It ... tells
its bitter-sweet story in a language of theatre that you may not yet
have encountered.' (The Scotsman)
'Johnstone... delivers a masterclass in physical comedy...this is a production filled
with grand gestures and delicate touches. It’s barking mad, of course, but
defies you not to fall in love with it.'' (The Stage)
'the
surprise gem of my visit to Edinburgh, a ‘circus-for-the-mind’...a wonderful
and enchanting piece of theatre' (Total Theatre Magazine)
Lazzi's artistic
director, David
W W Johnstone, lists as his
influences Grotowski, Kantor, and Brook on the one hand, with Laurel and Hardy,
Jacques Tati and Il Colombaioni balancing out the equation on the other. His own
trademark
performance style, a behavioural jazz, combines bold
characterisation, a joyful kaleidoscopic nonsense, a language of abstract sounds, and the
portrayal of the soulful within the comic. Previous experience includes eight years classical repertory with Will Geer’s
Theatricum Botanicum in Los Angeles, five years training with the Polish actor
and director Leonidas Ossetynski with a tour of Poland in the 1980s, a
workshop with Ryszard Cieslak, Grotowski's lead actor, study with
Ariane Mnouchkine’s Theatre du Soleil and Marcel Marceau, and extensive
professional work in physical comedy.
Recent work has focused on
developing original pieces, particularly for the street, and several
solos: Lazzi!
the solo show in 1995
from which his company now takes its name: 'Lazzi… perfectly describes
David W W Johnstone’s utterly delightful and highly amusing collage of comic
mime …all manner of endearingly quirky tom foolery… freewheeling… most
appealing.' (The Stage), 'Characteristically, he reduces language to
a barely articulated series of sounds which nevertheless convey immediate
meaning… endearing and exquisite comedy.' (The Scotsman); the
award nominated solo Gargoyle
Jam (1991, 1998): 'crafty
performance' (The Independent), 'splendid performance' (The
Scotsman), 'inspired' (The LA Times), 'Johnstone careens through
various personas with songs, monologues and the simplest props, skilfully
transforming motifs as he goes. ...he creates a unified thoughtful piece whose
visual and narrative images blend with notable intelligence.' (LA Weekly,
nominated Best Performance Art, 1990); and most recently, The
Zen Clown:
'This almost wordless solo show is really quite beautiful...a rather
surreal little show.' (Scotsman)
Sandy
Grierson was
winner of the 2007 Critics Awards for Theatre Scotland best actor award.
He has
worked with Communicado (Fergus Lamont), Vanishing Point Theatre Co (Subway,
The
Lost Ones, Stars Beneath the Sea, The Invisible Man),
Prime Productions (Romeo
& Juliet, Sunset Song),
and the acclaimed Ariel Teatr (Dybuk,
A Little Requiem for Kantor:
'Visually
stunning, emotionally disturbing and starkly illuminating, this
production challenges the rationality of what passes for theatre in the
West' The
Scotsman). Other work includes Tam O'Shanter with the Edinburgh Puppet
Company; he has trained with Zofia Kalinska of Tadeusz Kantor's
Cricot 2 and taken workshops with Ariane Mnouchkine & Le Theatre du Soleil in Paris.
Lazzi
experimental arts unit
Artistic Director: David
W W Johnstone
dwwj@lazzi.co.uk
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