A Morte de Danton
Event
It's time to drink the water of life from liqueur glasses, not from bowls.
We want to keep our common desire for theatre alive by continuing to share our work with you. After Castro, we will stream online on our website and on social media Danton’s Death by Georg Büchner, staged by Nuno Cardoso (April 3rd, at 10 pm, remaining available until the end of the day, April 5th, Sunday). Inspiring play written in 1835, it takes us behind the turbulent scenes of the French Revolution and its leader figures, Danton and Robespierre, heads and tails of the revolutionary ideas. A cast of 13 actors turn into 40 characters and livens up a narrative flow that, between short and long scenes, counterpoints and dreamlike delusions, anticipates film editing. Premiered last September, Danton’s Death was Nuno Cardoso's first staging as artistic director of TNSJ. From the stage of TNSJ, it travelled to Braga, Aveiro, Lisbon and Cluj-Napoca in Romania (within the scope of the Festival of the Union of European Theatres), reaching now, in a production by Fábio Coelho, the home of our audiences.
We want to keep our common desire for theatre alive by continuing to share our work with you. After Castro, we will stream online on our website and on social media Danton’s Death by Georg Büchner, staged by Nuno Cardoso (April 3rd, at 10 pm, remaining available until the end of the day, April 5th, Sunday). Inspiring play written in 1835, it takes us behind the turbulent scenes of the French Revolution and its leader figures, Danton and Robespierre, heads and tails of the revolutionary ideas. A cast of 13 actors turn into 40 characters and livens up a narrative flow that, between short and long scenes, counterpoints and dreamlike delusions, anticipates film editing. Premiered last September, Danton’s Death was Nuno Cardoso's first staging as artistic director of TNSJ. From the stage of TNSJ, it travelled to Braga, Aveiro, Lisbon and Cluj-Napoca in Romania (within the scope of the Festival of the Union of European Theatres), reaching now, in a production by Fábio Coelho, the home of our audiences.