Experimental theatre in Tokyo
Immersive performances in a pandemic, but can theatre change us and how we see the world?
We go to Tokyo, where artists are creating theatre that interacts with the human body. At the experimental festival, Theater Commons Tokyo ‘21, the audience is centre stage and immersed in the action, even during a pandemic.
At Aya Momose’s Performing Acupuncture, needles turn the body into a stage. By combining art and therapy, she creates sensations which make us think about our body and relationships to one another.
Using VR headsets, Meiro Koizumi takes us into the nightmares of Tokyo’s marginalised migrant workers. In this unsettling virtual space, we are transported into their pandemic experiences.
And as the world adjusts to coronavirus, Akira Takayama and Port B use radio to transmit voices from Fukushima into the masked crowds of Tokyo streets. We are reminded of frightening contamination and radioactivity. A decade since the earthquake, and a year since the pandemic’s onset, both these stories are still unfolding.
Presenter: Kyoko Iwaki
Producer: Alice Armstrong
(Photo: Theater Commons Tokyo '21. Credit: Shun Sato)
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- Sat 1 May 2021 16:06GMT´óÏó´«Ã½ World Service News Internet
- Sat 1 May 2021 22:32GMT´óÏó´«Ã½ World Service except Americas and the Caribbean & Europe and the Middle East
- Sun 2 May 2021 03:32GMT´óÏó´«Ã½ World Service
- Mon 3 May 2021 09:06GMT´óÏó´«Ã½ World Service
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