La revolució no serà tuitejada
cast
Laura Aubert / Javier Beltrán / Paula Blanco / Pol López / Mima Riera / David Verdaguer
set Enric Planas / costumes Berta Riera / make up Àngels Salinas / lighting David Bofarull (a.a.i.) / sound Roc Mateu / video Marc Lleixà
director assistant Marc Artigau / Catalan sign language advice FESOCA
produced by Teatre Lliure
thanks to Raquel Sans, GAES de Gran de Gràcia
show in Catalan
approximated length 1h. 20' no interval
debate with the artistic crew after the show on 10/13
play recommended by the Servei Educatiu del Teatre Lliure
hand program in Braille language avalaible at the box office
from Wednesday to Friday | 20:30 |
Saturday | 17:30 and 21:00 |
Sunday | 18:00 |
tariff a | |
Wednesday and Saturday afternoon (audience days) |
22€ |
the rest of days | 29€ |
with discount* (except the audience days) |
24,65€ |
*15% discount with the Carnet Jove, + 25, students, under 14s, senior citizens, unemployed, disabled, large families and single parent families, TNC and Mercat de les Flors subscribers, TR3SC, local regional libraries and theatres. To the La Vanguardia subscribers, the discount is only avalaible at the box office.
Ticket packs at 21€/show
La revolució no serà tuitejada + À la ville de... Barcelona
La revolució no serà tuitejada + El policía de las ratas
-
La revolució no serà tuitejada
© Ros Ribas
-
La revolució no serà tuitejada
© Ros Ribas
-
La revolució no serà tuitejada
© Ros Ribas
-
La revolució no serà tuitejada
© Ros Ribas
-
La revolució no serà tuitejada
© Ros Ribas
-
La revolució no serà tuitejada
© Ros Ribas
-
La revolució no serà tuitejada
© Ros Ribas
-
La revolució no serà tuitejada
© Ros Ribas
-
La revolució no serà tuitejada
© Ros Ribas (foto d'assaig)
-
La revolució no serà tuitejada
© Ros Ribas (foto d'assaig)
-
La revolució no serà tuitejada
© Ros Ribas (foto d'assaig)
Today it is our streets that are becoming inflamed. And although the TV insists on showing them to us, despite Twitter having taken over from it by giving a voice to millions of eyewitnesses with unprecedented immediacy, the revolution is still in all our minds. The revolution still involves a mental click, rather than the click of our mouse. What changes after the click? How do we change from being citizens to revolutionaries? What do we do to change things?