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Terén | For White Whale (photo: Adam Holubovský)Terén | For White Whale (photo: Adam Holubovský)
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Terén

For White Whale

The New Stage - Operations Building B

Basic information

Venue

The New Stage - Operations Building B

Ensemble

Terén

The work combining theatre and sound design presents a mass for the mythical whale and the world which is drawing to its close. The sonic exploration of a forlorn song of whales uses synthesizers and resonant trinkets. The hunter and the prey are in a landscape of the wretched world sailing the ocean of storytelling and technologies with the help of hi-tech and old-school navigation systems.

Cast

  • 2023-2024
  • 2024-2025

Creatives

Stage director
Petra Tejnorová
Sound design
Michal Cáb
Light design
Jonáš Garaj
Costume design
Jan Brejcha

About

Approximate running time: 120 minutes

A collective ritual and meditation over the questions of whether we can sustain our current manner of living and whether we stand on a brink of a dystopian future in which the largest and mightiest of animals that God has ever created, whales, will sacrifice their lives for our lifestyle.
The white whale appears in Moby Dick, a novel which, among other things, deals with the topic of extreme exploitation: not only in terms of natural resources, but also in terms of one another, our bodies and capabilities.

Melville’s work presents a kind of pre-Internet intertext in which the American author tried to thread together particles of an infinite system. In this novel already, the relationship between technology and tradition, modernity and mythology creates a tension. The presented play connects storytelling with technologies, encyclopaedic facts and lexicon entries with poetry, myths with everyday routine. It uses principles of decomposition, layers of associations, and individuality of scenic aspects. The viewers dive into the territory in which it is necessary to decide who deserves a bigger part of the loot, who will be sacrificed and who will carry out the sacrifice.

“Today, we will commemorate the story of captain Ahab and his crew. We will commemorate the story of Ishmael who was recruited to join Ahab’s crew on the ship called Pequod to sail the seas of the whole wide world on a quest for catching the most mythical of all whales – the giant white whale called Moby Dick. We will commemorate this whale which seemed impossible to trap. It reminds us of the transience of today’s world and the transience of our efforts. Three times Ahab tried to capture the whale and three times he failed. Let us commemorate captain Ahab whose pursuit drove him mad. He sacrificed his crew to the depths of the ocean. The only one to survive and tell the story that we commemorate today is Ishmael. Therefore, sisters and brothers, call me Ishmael for tonight.”

Loosely based on Herman Melville’s Moby Dick.

Photo and video gallery

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