I am excited to pass on the news the Bread and Puppet will be visiting DC as part of their spring tour!
They will be in town for one show only!!
Wednesday, April 19th, 7 pm
at St. Stephen and the Incarnation Episcopal Church- 1525 Newton St NW, WDC 20010 (corner of 16th and Newton NW)
Suggested donation: $10-$25, no one turned away for lack of funds.
Shows at St. Stephen's have reached capacity in the past, so make sure to get there early if you want a seat!
Bread & Puppet Theater is touring this spring with a new play, Faust 3, a proletarian rumination on displacement, heaven, and satisfaction in the tradition of Medieval Faust puppet shows and Goethe’s epic verse drama.
As thematically and formally diverse as Goethe's Faust 1 and 2, Bread and Puppet’s Faust 3 draws its public through a dreamlike succession of scenes depicting various aspects of proletarian experience in our time: from refugee migration, to the ubiquity of the gun; from the hunger that accompanies food product diversity, to the daily experience of factory workers, the rebellion of prisoners, and the adoration of the sun. "Faust 3" himself is played
by a small hand-puppet, darting between the hopper and the spout of a giant
grain mill. A phalanx of black folding chairs menaces the masses with its
resolutions of pity. The arms of a giant blue embracing puppet fill the stage.
Lubberland choral dancers hop, wiggle, and whistle. And a purple brass band arrives
to jitter levity into the feet of the population.
After the performance Bread and Puppet will serve its famous free sourdough rye bread with aioli, and Bread and Puppet’s “Cheap Art” – books, posters, postcards, pamphlets and banners from the Bread and Puppet Press – will be for sale.
The Bread and Puppet Practitioners-Of-The-Pursuit-Of-What String Band will welcome the public.
For more information on the event, please visit http://breadandpuppet.org/
Bread & Puppet Theater is an internationally
celebrated company that champions a visually rich, street-theater brand of
performance art filled with music, dance and slapstick. Its shows are political
and spectacular, with huge puppets made of paper maché and cardboard. Founded
in 1963 by Peter Schumann on New York City's Lower East Side, the theater has
been based in the North East Kingdom of Vermont since the early 1970s.