Robert Lepage

Oct 24, 2016, 12:43 AM

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The audience and the critics and whoever writes or talks about the show or writes comments, collaborates with the show – whether it’s good criticism or not. You continue editing it and making it new and making it whatever it is.

Robert Lepage

Robert Lepage, a Canadian, is one of contemporary theatre’s greats – a master of grand spectacle known for marrying vast and extravagant instincts with smaller, everyday concerns and quiet consideration. A talented actor and filmmaker as well as a playwright and director, his influences and productions run the gamut. And while typically sumptuous and technically cutting-edge (his collaborations range from Cirque du Soleil to Wagner’s Ring for the New York Met), his work frequently arises from his own experience.

That instinct has never been more strongly felt than in Lepage’s show for Melbourne Festival 2016, 887. It’s a powerful autobiographical work that begins in his bilingual boyhood home and unfolds into a dizzying and inventive exploration of personal history and memory across five decades. Lepage’s upbringing happened to coincide with Quebec Separatism, and 887’s story takes root in a household of differing beliefs.

Lepage has described theatre as the ‘grand sport of remembering’ – but his passions and fascinations fall much more broadly. Find out how: in Melbourne to perform in 887, Robert Lepage meets Richard Watts for an in-depth conversation about autobiography, his theatrical practice and his view on the wider world.

Richard Watts and Robert Lepage — Photo: Jon Tjhia

Presented in partnership with Melbourne Festival.