Dom Juan ou le Festin de pierre
by Molière
Directed by Jean-Pierre Vincent
Du 17 October au 16 December
Discover the play
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A storm leaves him washed up on a beach where he proposes to two peasant girls and slaps a fisherman. With Elvira’s brothers in chase, he is forced to flee again. Lost in a forest, he incites a poor hermit to commit blasphemy, saves Don Carlos, one of Elvira’s brothers, from bandits, and invites to dinner the statue of a Commander he killed in the past. Upon returning home, he sends his biggest creditor packing, maliciously dismisses his father’s reproaches and tries to again seduce Elvira who has come to speak to him about his salvation. To his great surprise, the statue comes to dinner and invites him in return. Sensing that the situation is starting to become perilous, Don Juan decides to fool the world by feigning newfound piety only to praise the religious hypocrisy of those in power. Too late, the statue returns and drags the young renegade down to hell.
Molière, the author
Don Juan or The Feast with the Statue is a central (and unique) play in Molière’s oeuvre. Of a somewhat unclassifiable genre, neither comedy nor tragedy, the play moves freely and unpredictably between the two. Molière adapted this fable well-known to Parisian theatres (there had been two Italian and two French versions in the space of a few years) at great risk. He was gambling on a big hit, which he needed, but was also taking aim at his eminent enemies in the process: the pious entourage of the queen mother that sought to influence the young Louis XIV. The play was performed in February 1665. Despite triumphing, it was quickly withdrawn from performance. After this experience, Molière never again tried to tackle political interests head on.Jean-Pierre Vincent, the director
After positions as artistic director of the Théâtre National de Strasbourg, the Comédie-Française and the Théâtre des Amandiers in Nanterre, Jean-Pierre Vincent divides his time between directing and teaching, with a focus on contemporary writing. The project of directing Don Juan had been with him for a long time. His staging is rich in multiple interpretations and possible orientations of the play, but also of the myth of Don Juan, seeking to render the activity rather than the topicality of Molière’s text in a journey to the 17th century where every word must be performed in the present. Like in Alfred Jarry’s Ubu Roi, which he directed at the Comédie-Française in 2009, the play revolves around an eternal and omnipresent couple, here Don Juan and Sganarelle. The two accomplices pass through the world in a manner that is strange and erratic, combative and contentious, in the midst of very serious issues and bursts of burlesque humour. This season, he is also presenting Labiche’s The Blue-legged Lady at the Studio-Théâtre. -
Direction**:** Jean-Pierre Vincent
Dramaturgy**:** Bernard Chartreux
Direction assistant**:** Frédérique Plain
Sets: Jean-Paul Chambas
Artistic collaboration to sets**:** Carole Metzner
Costumes**:** Patrice Cauchetier
Lights**:** Alain Poisson
Sound: Benjamin Furbacco
Make-up**:** Suzanne Pisteur Stunts**:** Bernard Chabin
Documents
Casting
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Jean-Michel Rucheton: The Statue of the Commendatore