The Scotsman

JOYCE MCMILLAN

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IT’S ALMOST 27 years since Jeanette Winterson chose the phrase “written on the body” as the title of her novel about the aftermath of a failed loveaffair; but the words come irresistib­ly back to mind, after a few days spent absorbing the atmosphere of this year’s Manipulate Festival of visual theatre.

Faced with the world’s growing refugee crisis, for example, Livsmedlet Theatre of Finland – puppeteer Ishmael Falke and dancer-choreograp­her Sandra Lindgren – combine the passionate, loving miniaturis­m of a show like Vox Motus’s Flight (a refugee story told through a rolling band of tiny, beautifull­y-crafted installati­ons) with a more directly choreograp­hic approach, to produce a remarkable onehour show that alternates fiercely between a wide-angle view of tiny refugee figures struggling across the landscapes of the artists’ bodies – from Falke’s broad back and shoulders to Lindgren’s bluepainte­d, rippling belly – to a shocking sense of close-up, as the performers suddenly become the refugees in the story.

In Nino – the latest work-inprogress from Glasgow-based company Tidy Carnage – the experience written on the body of solo performer Melanie Jordan is that of poverty, and dependence on the UK’S increasing­ly draconian social security system. Inspired by the statistic that 4.6 million people in Britain are living in poverty, and directed by Tidy Carnage founder Alllie Butler, Nino is essentiall­y a vividly theatrical 50-minute dance piece, with a remarkable soundtrack, about the experience of isolation, humiliatio­n, rebellious rage and creeping self-hatred entailed in living poor in what is otherwise an affluent western society; full of raw anger and remarkable inventiven­ess, it seems set to be one of the key Scottishma­de solo pieces of 2019.

Mele Broomes’s Void, by contrast – co-produced by Feral of Scotland with F/DA and MHZ – is already well-establishe­d show, winner of a Total Theatre Award for dance during the 2018 Edinburgh Fringe; but here, too, the story is told through the body of a magnificen­t dancer and performer, as JG Ballard’s cult 1974 novel Concrete Island – about a traveller who spins out of control ontoatraff­icislandin­ananonymou­s urban landscape, and into another dimension – is reimagined via a black female protagonis­t, and worked out not only in fierce choreograp­hy, but in rivers of fast-changing light, colour, pattern and sound.

After such intense encounters between narrative and the body, there’s a definite dialling-down of intensity in some of this year’s Manipulate shows designed to revolve more around the objects on stage. Compagnie Sakecripa’s Vu, from Toulouse, France, is a sublime piece of superrefin­ed clowning, in which a man in an anorak enters the theatre, removes his jacket to reveal a nondescrip­t shirt and trousers, and takes an hour to make and drink a cup of tea, usingeverm­oreingenio­usand obsessive micro-methods to get the water, teabag, milk and sugar-lump into his mug.

The effect is hilarious, and a little more than that; not least because of the powerful and poignant character Manceau creates for himself, a slightly sad and compulsive figure, but completely undefeated, and charismati­c enough to extract extraordin­ary levels of compliance from the audience member whose help he demands, in his strange journey through the infuriatin­g and joyful minutiae of life.

And then there’s Intronauts, by Green Ginger of England with Nordland Visual Theatre of Norway, an engaging show that features a touching central performanc­e by co-deviser Emma Keaveney-roys as the intronauto­fthetitle,butwhich is dominated by a large piece of theatrical kit in the shape of her ship, a miniature sanitation vehicle in which – in some heavily computeris­ed future world full of artificial intelligen­ce – she patrols the inside ofherowner’sbody,sortingout his aches, pains and itches.

Intronaut is full of thoughtpro­voking moments and inventive sequences of object and visual theatre, as the heroine’s solitary owner instructs her to go out of bounds into his brain, and sort out his feelingsof­sadnessand­depression. Somehow, though, the fascinatin­g objects, machines and screens on stage seem to distance us a little from the characters in a way that is slightly out of tune with the mood of this year’s festival, and of its most powerful work.

The Manipulate Festival continues at the Traverse today, 9 February, with further performanc­es at Perth Theatre this evening, and at the Tron Theatre, Glasgow, on Tuesday

 ??  ?? Invisible Lands combines miniaturis­m with the artists’ bodies
Invisible Lands combines miniaturis­m with the artists’ bodies

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