INTERNATIONAL SHOW
History of Violence
Im Herzen der Gewalt
ARTIST: by Édouard Louis, directed by Thomas Ostermeier | Schaubühne
120 min | Ages 16+
- 6/3, Friday, 7:30 PM [by invitation]
- March 7 and 8, Saturday at 9 PM, and Sunday at 8 PM
- Teatro Liberdade | Rua São Joaquim, 129, Liberdade
- Accessible Location
- The session on March 8 features Brazilian Sign Language interpretation and audio description
- There is depiction of sexual violence and use of strobe lights.
SYNOPSIS
Based on Édouard Louis’s autobiographical novel of the same name, this production directed by Thomas Ostermeier is both a personal account and a powerful social analysis of coming of age, desire, and migration. The work reconstructs the night when the young Édouard meets Reda, a man of Algerian origin, and takes him back to his apartment in Paris. The encounter, initially marked by intimacy and affection, turns into an experience of extreme violence. From this trauma, the play follows the protagonist’s journey through the police, the medical system, and refuge at his sister’s home in the rural north of France, revealing how institutional and personal responses expose racism, homophobia, and the obscure power structures rooted in society.
BACKGROUND
Édouard Louis is a French writer. Born Eddy Bellegueule, he studied sociology with Didier Eribon at the École Normale Supérieure in Paris, where he lives. His debut autobiographical novel, The End of Eddy (2014), became a number-one bestseller in France and was translated into 18 languages. In the book, he recounts his youth as a gay man in a working-class environment in the French provinces. His second, also autobiographical, novel, History of Violence, was published in 2017, followed by the social study Who Killed My Father. The author received the Pierre Guénin Prize for his commitment to combating homophobia.
Thomas Ostermeier has been a resident director and a member of the artistic leadership of the Schaubühne since 1999. He graduated in directing from the Hochschule für Schauspielkunst “Ernst Busch” and was artistic director of the Baracke at the Deutsches Theater in Berlin. He has directed productions at the Münchner Kammerspiele, the Edinburgh Festival, the Burgtheater in Vienna, and the Comédie-Française in Paris. In 2004, he became an associate artist of the Festival d’Avignon, where he regularly presents his work. He received the Golden Lion of the Venice Biennale for lifetime achievement (2011), as well as several honors, including the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany and the Kythera Prize for Culture (both in 2018).
The Schaubühne is one of the most important German-language theaters and an international reference in contemporary theater-making. Founded in 1962 in Berlin and based since 1981 at the Schaubühne am Lehniner Platz, it centers its work on a permanent ensemble of around 30 actors. Its repertoire brings together classics of world drama and works by contemporary authors, with more than one hundred world and German premieres in recent decades. Under the artistic direction of Thomas Ostermeier since 2009, the theater undertakes extensive international tours and organizes the FIND festival, dedicated to new dramaturgies and exchange among different theatrical traditions.
CRITICAL RECEPTION
“History of Violence focuses on people and their confined existence, shaped by codes of honor, ambition, and irresistible desire. Something like this is rarely seen in theater.”
Rüdiger Schaper, Tagesspiegel
“Class rage, homophobia, xenophobia, and self-loathing—phenomena that seem to define the daily news—form the layers of violence unleashed when two lonely people draw close, unaware of the hatred in the air they breathe. In seeking meaning in such an infernal experience, the work dissects the hatreds reshaping the contemporary world—and which, if ignored, threaten to poison us all. A difficult, demanding, and extraordinary piece of theater.”
David Barbour, Lighting and Sound América
CREDITS
Based on the novel by Édouard Louis. Translated from the French by Hinrich Schmidt-Henkel. Adaptation by Thomas Ostermeier, Florian Borchmeyer, Édouard Louis.
Cast: Christoph Gawenda, Laurenz Laufenberg, Renato Schuch, Alina Stiegler
Musician: Thomas Witte
Director: Thomas Ostermeier
Assistant Director: David Stöhr
Set and Costume Design: Nina Wetzel
Video: Sébastien Dupouey
Music: Nils Ostendorf
Dramaturgy: Florian Borchmeyer
Lighting Design: Michael Wetzel
Choreography Assistant: Johanna Lemke
Assistant Set Designer: Krystyna Granitza
Assistant Costume Designers: Christin Noel, Mailys Leung Cheng Soo, Carlotta Zeitelhack
Assistant Video: Marie Sanchez
Stage Manager: Marija Vahldiek
Prompter: Heike Kroemer
Sound: Maxime Hladiy, Sebastian Melichar
Video Operators: Farah Cherkit, Tom Czapka
Props: Soraya Shili, Anais Laskus
Choreography Training: Yeri Anarika Vargas Sánchez
Coproduction with Théâtre de la Ville Paris, Théâtre National Wallonie-Bruxelles and St. Ann’s Warehouse Brooklyn. Supported by LOTTO-Stiftung Berlin.