Those formulae
that paved the way and popularised the emergence of mime from the oblivion
in which it had been languishing today seem outdated. The so-called
‘classic’ mime with its butterflies, puppet imitations,
oriental stories, adventures and misfortunes of fixed characters, etc.,
lead to a closed circle of repetitions that condemn mime to the use
of stereotypical clichés that bind it and prevent any possible
evolution.
Since
the creation of Els Joglars in 1962, the company has been driven by
a constant urge to renovate and discover all the possibilities and limitations
of mime. Above all, we have tried to do in six years what mime has taken
thirty years to do in the rest of Europe, with the aim of putting our
group on a par with the best international mime groups, while always
ensuring that we maintain the characteristics of our southern personality.
This excitement is made very clear in our participation in international
festivals where at present the accent is very much on working without
limits and ‘airing’ all the tradtionalisms, for the public
must continually receive diverse impressions through pantomime.
Faced
with this need there appears a fascinating question: at the moment of
renovating and extending our means of expression and exploring the diverse
characteristics we have, does mime not become limiting? I believe that
the question can not be answered until a certain time has passed and
we can observe the results; meanwhile, we continue to direct our work
through the field of research, basing our work essentially on the productions
staged to date, but at the same time jettisoning all the technical exhibitionism
and ‘preciousness’: a truly collective task, both of production
and interpretation is the hallmark of the production we present today.
The elimination of the personal number represents the breaking with
a veritable institution amongst the mime companies.
El
diari falls into the experimental field described above,
given that we make use of the voice, objects, the set and, above all,
we have conferred on the work a rhythm of continuity of time, rejecting
in this way the traditional scene changes that only serve to cool the
attention of the audience.
By
means of a style that is often grotesque and a rhythm that is lively
and dynamic, and ever faster, El diari sets
out to reproduce in the form of a pantomime the past, present and perhaps
the future of the world that surrounds us, through the staged vision
of the news of an ordinary newspaper. Those formulae that paved the
way and popularised the emergence of mime from the oblivion in which
it had been languishing today seem outdated. The so-called ‘classic’
mime with its butterflies, puppet imitations, oriental stories, adventures
and misfortunes of fixed characters, etc., lead to a closed circle of
repetitions that condemn mime to the use of stereotypical clichés
that bind it and prevent any possible evolution.
Albert Boadella