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cast
Aina Clotet Teresa / Eduard Farelo Xus / Jordi Martínez Jaume / Isabel Roccatti Martina / Elena Tarrats Laura

translation from English Cristina Genebat / setting and costumes Alejandro Andújar / lighting David Bofarull / sound Ramon Ciércoles
 
director assistant Georgina Oliva
 
produced by Teatre Lliure

show in Catalan
approximate length 1h. 50' no interval
 
02/22 debate with the company after the show
performance recommended by the Servei Educatiu del Teatre Lliure


follow #jocdemiralls on twitter

Schedules 
from Wednesday to Friday 21:00
Saturday 18:00 and 21:30
Sunday 18:30
Prices 
tariff a  
Wednesday and Saturday afternoon
(the audience days)
22€
the rest of days 29€
advanced sales
(before the premiere)

26€
with discount*
(except on the audience days)
24,50€
tariff top row
(on certain performances)
15€

*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.

Joc de miralls - trailer

Juan Carlos Martel brings to life American playwright Annie Baker’s Circle Mirror Transformation. Awarded the 2010 Obie for Best New American Play, it was dubbed one of the ten best pieces of 2009 by the New York Times, Time Out and the New Yorker. Get ready for a modern, absorbing, affectionate and entertaining ride.

Five lost souls enroll in acting classes at a community center, looking for meaning in life. Will six weeks of theatre change them?

How could such a young playwright have swept the United States away with a work based on something as simple as an acting class? Baker’s work is about just that: acting classes at a small community center with people who – for some reason or another – need to break free of their everyday tropes, leaving behind the routine they’ve somehow stumbled into. A comedy which indirectly uses theatre as therapy.
Juan Carlos Martel Bayod

I wanted to depict the beauty and nobility that arise when people dive into something naturally, even something therapeutic. I think the fact that I hate ninety per cent of what comes out of my mouth is a large part of why I am a playwright. The way human beings speak is so heartbreaking to me – we never sound the way we want to sound. We’re always stopping ourselves in mid-sentence because we are terrified of saying the wrong thing. Speaking is a kind of misery. And I guess I comfort myself by finding the rhythms and accidental poetry in everyone’s inadequate attempts to articulate their thoughts. We’re all sort of suffering as we go about our days, trying and failing to communicate with other people.
Annie Baker

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