The Scotsman

JOYCE MCMILLAN

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ANXIETY was the word, in the first half of this week’s Manipulate Festival at the Traverse Theatre: from anxiety about the whole course of western civilisati­on, to the blue funk of afearfulan­dcompulsiv­ewoman in a supermarke­t, terrified of objects which are not red.

In Ressacs ( **** ) by Compagnie Gare Centrale of Belgium, the brilliant and muchhonour­ed Belgian makerperfo­rmer Agnes Limbos and her stage partner Gregory Houben become a couple who represent western civilisati­on at its most fragile and aggressive.

Sitting at a little table peopled by simple objects, they conjure up a series of worlds, as the couple first lose their convention­al suburban way of life, then wash up on a desert island which they begin to dominate and exploit like a colonial queen and emperor, and finally get into fossil fuels in a big way, until everything blows up in their faces. What a pair of darlings they are, these archetypal first world characters; and yet how utterly lethal.

The same Limbos-style imagery is also visible in Compagnie A of France’s Song Of The Goat (***), in which a suburban idyll between neighbouri­ng houses is smashed when a man in a messy caravan moves in between them, along with his large and disturbing billy-goat.

Israeli artist Ariel Doron’s similarly-styled show Plastic Heroes ( **** ) attacks the stupidity, cruelty and lethal tedium of war using little plastic soldier toys of the kind that still dominate some shelves of every toy department, and one particular­ly beautiful stuffed tiger.

And then there is the dancebased double bill Peurbleu and Don’t Be Afraid ( **** ) by C&C Company of Italy. In Peurbleu, Chiara Taviani is a woman in a red coat and hood in a supermarke­t full of red containers, anxiously reversesho­pping from a red plastic basket. And in Don’t Be Afraid, inspired by Debussy’s L’apresmidi d’un Faune, Carlo Massari gives an extraordin­ary performanc­e as a gorgeous male life-force gradually brought down by age, sickness, arrogance and foolishnes­s, but somehow still defiantly in motion.

Early shows at this year’s Manipulate also included an inspiring edition of the festival’s Snapshots showcase for emerging Scottish artists, and a tentative glimpse of new puppetry work from its Testroom puppetry project, run jointly with the National Theatre of Scotland and the Tron. And as ever, it’s the interface between top-flight internatio­nal work and young Scottish-based artists that makes the Manipulate Festival such a satisfying creative event, as it rolls on through its final performanc­es today.

Manipulate is at the Traverse Theatre, Edinburgh, until tonight.

 ??  ?? Gregory Houben and Agnes Limbos are a couple who represent western civilisati­on at its most fragile and aggressive
Gregory Houben and Agnes Limbos are a couple who represent western civilisati­on at its most fragile and aggressive

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