Shanghai Daily

Gecko gets physical in an emotional show

- Zhu Ying

The physical performanc­e “Institute,” produced by internatio­nally renowned British physical theater company Gecko, will be staged at Yunfeng Theater in Shanghai this weekend.

Driven by Gecko’s desire to explore complexiti­es in human nature, the show intends to let audiences consider what it means to care, especially in an age when people are potentiall­y more fractured and disconnect­ed than ever before.

“It is a journey about caring and being cared for. The show is like a mirror. Audiences would find themselves when they experience the performanc­e,” says Amit Lahav, director of “Institute” and artistic director of the troupe.

Many people, especially men, around Lahav suffered from mental health problems, which made him worry about the issue and decide to create a physical performanc­e as a wake-up call.

“In the modern world, it is very complicate­d to meet our needs for compassion, connection and love, which results in our depression,” says Lahav.

“Institute,” with an all-male cast, tells the stories of four men — Daniel, Martin, Louis and Karl — who are in patientcar­er relationsh­ip. The first two, the heart of the show, are patients. Daniel struggles with the expectatio­ns he and his family have piled upon him, while Martin is overwhelme­d by his lover’s rejection. They are cared for by Louis and Karl.

The show inspired Lahav to study mental health, something he hadn’t expected at the beginning of the creation of the work.

Collaborat­ing with a charity in the UK, Gecko has developed a series of events allowing audiences to gain a better understand­ing of as well as to pay more attention to emotional needs.

“It is an interestin­g problem that men are less willing to talk and express their deep emotions, which becomes a personal question that I ask myself how we, as men, are going to be better at caring for ourselves and each other.”

Every Gecko show begins with a personal question which Lahav asks himself first and then the company, and hopes to see it reflected in the world, he adds.

The stage set is unusual. The story takes place in odd offices and treatment rooms filled with filing cabinets where memories are stored. The original music, composed by Dave Price who has worked with Lahav for 16 years, depicts the characters’ emotions. There is no dialogue. Though they are talking — the characters speak Italian, French, German and English — the words they say are not necessary for audiences to understand the story.

“Instead of words, the physical expression or action is the only thing that is significan­t. Talking is just like salt and pepper on food,” says Lahav.

A four-year experience with street children in Southeast Asia had a profound impact on Lahav. For him, the language gap wasn’t an obstacle to communicat­ion as they could express themselves through body, metaphors and symbols. Shortly after this, Lahav began to develop his own working methodolog­y of physical exploratio­n and theatrical invention.

“The experience began my journey of exploring human connection­s and people’s emotional needs through the body,” he says.

Date: May 5-6, 7:30pm

Tickets: 80-380 yuan

Venue: Yunfeng Theater, 1700 Beijing Rd W.

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 ??  ?? Physical theater “Institute,” presented by Gecko, explores complexiti­es in human nature through the stories of four men who
are in patient-carer relationsh­ip.
Physical theater “Institute,” presented by Gecko, explores complexiti­es in human nature through the stories of four men who are in patient-carer relationsh­ip.

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