Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
The Encounter (NHB Modern Plays) - cover

The Encounter (NHB Modern Plays)

Simon McBurney, Complicite

Publisher: Nick Hern Books

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

In 1969 Loren McIntyre, a National Geographic photographer, found himself lost among the people of the remote Javari Valley in Brazil. It was an encounter that was to change his life, bringing the limits of human consciousness into startling focus.
Inspired by the book Amazon Beaming by Petru Popescu, The Encounter traces McIntyre's journey into the depths of the Amazon rainforest, incorporating innovative technology into a solo performance to build a shifting world of sound.
The Encounter opened at the Edinburgh International Festival in August 2015 performed by Simon McBurney, and received its London premiere at the Barbican in February 2016 before embarking on a world tour.
'Masterful storytelling from a man and a company who are incapable of remaining within known theatrical boundaries' - Independent
'The stuff of a twisting, turning, thoroughly engrossing fairytale... McBurney captures the metaphysical spirit - as well as the pulse-quickening heart - of the experience with this head-turning, spellbinding show' - Telegraph
'The effect is a soundcloud of a process, in which fact and fiction, past and present, research and production intermingle, spinning a story out of the air' - Variety
'In a solo performance made with many people... [McBurney] pulls the thread of a story from out of the noise of contemporary western life and the sounds of the jungle to create a meditation on interconnectedness, perception and time' - Guardian
'The Encounter is a tour de force that shows contemporary theatre at its most immersive and thought-provoking' - Financial Times
Available since: 11/02/2016.
Print length: 96 pages.

Other books that might interest you

  • Life: Poem XXI A Book - cover

    Life: Poem XXI A Book

    Emily Dickinson

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Poem XXI: "A Book", read by the wonderful podcasters at the Podcasters Across Borders 2006 conference, in Kingston, Ontario, June 23-24, 2006. 
    Readers:1: Andy Doan2: Arthur Masters3: Bob Goyetche4: Ben Kenney5: Bruce Murray6: Betty Rock7: Cat8: Cathi Bond9: Craig Newell10: Charlotte Scott11: Dave Delaney12: Matt13: Dan Meisner14: David Newland15: Evan Thornton16: Hugh McGuire17: Isabelle Michaud18: Joe Chisholm19: John Bignell 20: Jay Moonah21: Julien Smith22: Krash Coarse23: Leesa Barnes24: Maurizio Ortolani25: Michael Bhardwaj26: Mark Blevis27: Matthew Forsythe28: Neil Gorman29: Nora Young30: Sonya Buyting31: Samuel Genera32: Sylvain Grand-Maison33: Sarah McGreggor34: Shane35: Tim Campbell36: Tristan Homer37: Tom Luscher38: Tod Maffin39: Tony Piper40: Wendy Elliot
    Show book
  • A Rhyme A Dozen ― Music - 12 Poets 12 Poems 1 Topic - cover

    A Rhyme A Dozen ― Music - 12...

    John Dryden, Stephen Vincent...

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    ‘A dime a dozen’ as known in America, is perhaps equal to the English ‘cheap as chips’ but whatever the lingua franca of your choice in this series we hereby submit ‘A Rhyme a Dozen’ as 12 poems on many given subjects that are a well-rounded gathering, maybe even an essential guide, from the knowing pens of classic poets and their beautifully spoken verse to the comfort of your ears. 
    1 - A Rhyme A Dozen - 12 Poems, 12 Poets, 1 Topic - Music - An Introduction 
    2 - To Music by Rainer Maria Rilke 
    3 - Music by Stephen Vincent Benét 
    4 - Music by Wilfred Owen 
    5 - Power of Music by William Wordsworth 
    6 - Master of Music by Henry van Dyke 
    7 - Song 53 - What is That Flute Whose Music Thrills Me with Joy by Kabir 
    8 - Rain Music by Joseph Semon Cotter 
    9 - The Strange Music by G K Chesterton 
    10 - The Iron Music by Ford Madox Ford 
    11 - Music's Empire by Andrew Marvell 
    12 - Sonnet 8 - Music to Hear Why Hearest Thou Music Sadly by William Shakespeare 
    13 - Alexander's Feast or, The Power of Music by John Dryden
    Show book
  • Solitude - cover

    Solitude

    Alexander Pope

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    LibriVox volunteers bring you 17 different recordings of Solitude by Alexander Pope. This was the weekly poetry project for the week of February 17th, 2008.
    Show book
  • Shadow Play - cover

    Shadow Play

    James Norcliffe

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Norcliffe professes not to be a confessional poet; nevertheless he freely acknowledges that places and people served as prompts for the poems. New Zealand based, Norcliffe is well-travelled and his poems have international resonance. Placing Shadow Play with one other poetry collection as a finalist for the annual international Proverse Prize in 2011, the judging panel (reviewing entries with no knowledge of the writers) found an expert hand behind a wide variety of well-wrought poems on a range of topics, pleasingly interwoven with literary allusions.  
    "Though the 'ordinary world' most of these poems inhabit is rich with the familiar—ATMs, case managers, vindaloo—what James Norcliffe finds there is far from typical. And when he turns his considerable imagination up a notch, setting a giraffe on the Russian steppe, say, or exploring the largest statue of a strawberry in the world, the results have the surprise and gleam of the truly extraordinary. Shadow Play is a treasure chest of fresh, insightful work."—Don Bogen, poet and editor of the Cincinnati Review, USA. 
    "James Norcliffe is part bar wag, part trapeze artist, and every bit the literary raconteur. He wields his imagination like a spot welder, spraying out glowing trails of hot sparks. And yet so much in these pages happens in slo-mo, in fractured memory. There are poems for cartographers and window washers, personae poems for Hamlet, Alice in Wonderland, and sadistic Empress Dowager Cixi, love poems for books, ATMs, and vindaloo. But his great poem for the Icthyosaurus -- "not one centimetre / of human history in the / kilometres of its eyes" -- exposes the slinky sinister undertow at work. Suicide, heart attacks, suicide bombers, and auto da fe suck us in. Norcliffe pokes and prods the reader like a forensic tech and in the end his poems leave spatter patterns."—Richard Peabody, poet, novelist, and editor of Gargoyle Magazine, USA.
    Show book
  • Christopher Durang Explains It All for You - 6 Plays - cover

    Christopher Durang Explains It...

    Christopher Durang

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    A collection of dark comedies about terrible therapists, dysfunctional parents, and more, from a winner of a Tony Award for Best Play and three Obies.  
     
    Known for his dark, absurd humor and social commentary, Christopher Durang explores the pain and confusion of everyday life—and makes audiences laugh uproariously at the results. Sister Mary Ignatius Explains It All for You, the center of a storm of controversy for its satire of misplaced trust in religious authority, remains as powerful today as when it was originally produced. The excruciatingly funny The Nature and Purpose of the Universe asks whether Eleanor Mann’s Job-like suffering is really her fault, while Titanic takes us into the heart of children’s anger with their parents and parents’ manipulation of their children. In Beyond Therapy, two horrifyingly human therapists pursue their own needs at the expense of the most mismatched couple ever to meet through a personal ad. 
     
    Also including ’Dentity Crisis and The Actor’s Nightmare, this collection demonstrates that laughter is the best surgery, slicing through prejudice and hypocrisy, cutting out dead beliefs and inflamed opinions. These black comedies, lit by lightning bolts of truth and humor, come from “one of the most explosively funny American dramatists” (Newsweek). 
     
    Includes: 
     
    The Nature and Purpose of the Universe 
    ’Dentity Crisis 
    Titanic 
    The Actor’s Nightmare 
    Sister Mary Ignatius Explains It All for You 
    Beyond Therapy
    Show book
  • Last Poems - Poetry of AE Housman - cover

    Last Poems - Poetry of AE Housman

    A.E. Housman

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Housman himself knew that his output as a poet would not be large. In his preface to this volume, he wrote, rather touchingly:  
    "I publish these poems, few though they are, because it is not likely that I shall ever be impelled to write much more." He pulled Last Poems together because his life-long friend, Moses Jackson, was dying and Housman wanted Jackson to be able to read these poems before he passed away.The work in this volume is more varied in form and content than in his first book, and shows a change of heart, a greater acceptance of the human condition, along with a more impersonal voice. His sense of the finality of life is strong: Dead clay that did me kindnessI can do none to youBut only wear for breast-knotThe flower of sinner's rue. Yet, if anything, his voice is gentler, his spirit calmer and more accepting, and his sense of the eternal stronger than in his first book.  Enjoy!
    Show book