George Dandin / La Jalousie du Barbouillé

by Molière
Directed by Hervé Pierre
Saison 2015-2016
Du 8 May au 26 June
Durée 2:05
Lieu Vx-Colombier
George Dandin / La Jalousie du Barbouillé
Inspired by a tale from the Middle Ages, Georges Dandin or the Confounded Husband hides “behind the laughter the fact that a social order is crumbling and that a new world is emerging”, comments Hervé Pierre, sociétaire of the Comédie-Française.

Discover the play

  • This new world will soon see the nobility losing power to the merchant class, a shift that will continue until the advent of the Second Empire. It is for this reason that Hervé Pierre sets the play in France of the 1850s: “by setting the action of Georges Dandin at the time of Courbet and Napoleon III, it brings about a distancing, along with a new perspective on the play. We would probably make the same observation by moving the story to today –we are constantly saying goodbye to our illusions”, he comments. Indeed, the play is perhaps wrongly described as farce, so cruel and bitter is the outcome for Dandin, made to bear the full weight of his arranged marriage by his young wife. His family-in-law constantly remind him of their class difference, the profit he draws from it being supposed to compensate for the daily affronts inflicted on him from all sides. A similar plot is found almost twenty years earlier in La Jalousie du Barbouillé (The Jealous Husband), a resolutely comical one-act antecedent that Hervé Pierre places alongside the better remembered Dandin. At every moment, in both plays, one feels a deep empathy for the characters in their violence, their spinelessness or apathy. They so deeply embody human nature that one inevitably identifies with them.

  • Mise en scène : Hervé Pierre
    Scénographie et costumes : Éric Ruf
    Lumières : Christian Dubet
    Musique originale : Vincent Leterme
    Travail chorégraphique : Cécile Bon
    Collaboration artistique : Laurence Kélépikis
    Assistante à la scénographie : Dominique Schmitt
    Assistante aux costumes : Siegrid Petit-Imbert

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