By Heart | Tiago Rodrigues
Αγοράστε εισιτήρια →Πρακτικές Πληροφορίες
| Ημερομηνία | Τρίτη 12 Μαΐου |
|---|---|
| Τιμή | €15 |
| Εισιτήρια | Αγοράστε εισιτήρια |
| Χώρος | Onassis Stegi (Κουκάκι) |
| Διεύθυνση | Λεωφ. Συγγρού 107, Αθήνα |
Περιγραφή στα Αγγλικά
Ten people sit on stage who were in the audience five minutes ago. They do not know each other. They do not know what they are about to memorize. The man standing in front of them begins to speak, and the first line of a poem you half-recognize settles over the room like a question you forgot you had been carrying.
Tiago Rodrigues is a Portuguese playwright, actor, and director who has led the Festival d'Avignon — the world's foremost theater festival — since 2022, the first non-French artist to hold the position. By Heart, first performed in 2013, is the work that made his name travel. The premise: Rodrigues invites ten audience members on stage and teaches them Shakespeare's Sonnet 30 line by line. While they learn, he tells stories — about his grandmother Candida, who was going blind and asked him to choose one book to memorize before she lost her sight. About Fahrenheit 451, where people become living books to save literature from burning. About Pasternak smuggling Doctor Zhivago out of the Soviet Union in his memory. The stories orbit a single question: what happens when a text lives inside a person instead of on a page?
The Onassis Stegi audience for international theater tends to arrive already oriented — people who follow European festival circuits, who recognize Rodrigues' name from Avignon or the Wiener Festwochen, who read the program notes in the lobby before the house lights dim. But By Heart also draws a less expected crowd: people who came because someone told them this was the show where the audience ends up on stage reciting Shakespeare, and they wanted to see if that could possibly work.
| Aspect | Details | |--------|---------| | **Setting** | Onassis Stegi main stage — 900-seat contemporary arts venue on Syngrou Avenue | | **Vibe** | Alert, participatory, intimate despite the scale — the room leans forward | | **Sound** | Spoken word, unamplified presence, the acoustics of a single voice filling a theater | | **Door** | Ticketed, presale phases — Phase B already sold out |
The performance builds through accumulation. Each story Rodrigues tells adds a layer to the act of memorization happening in front of you. The ten volunteers repeat lines, stumble, recover, help each other. By the midpoint, the audience is silently mouthing the words alongside them. The sonnet's themes — memory, loss, the recovery of what seemed gone — stop being literary analysis and become the experience itself. When the ten people on stage finally recite the complete poem from memory, the room holds still in a way that has nothing to do with politeness.
If you want conventional theater with a fourth wall, scripted dialogue, and a passive seat, By Heart dismantles those boundaries by design — the audience is the material. But if you want to sit in a room where a single performer convinces strangers to memorize Shakespeare and, in the process, makes an argument about why literature survives that you will carry home in your own memory, this is the production.
Onassis Stegi is on Syngrou Avenue, reachable from Syngrou-Fix metro via a twelve-minute walk or the venue's free shuttle bus running every ten minutes on performance nights. Performances are May 11 and 12, approximately ninety minutes. Phase B presale has sold out — check the Onassis website for the next ticket release.
Two nights in Athens, from an artist who directs the largest theater festival in the world. The sonnet the audience memorizes lasts fourteen lines. The argument it makes about memory lasts longer.