
Bouchra Ouizguen’s Compagnie O Marrake will perform the New York premiere of Corbeaux (Crows) at the Brooklyn Museum this weekend (photo © Hasnae-El-Ouarga)
Brooklyn Museum, Beaux-Arts Court
200 Eastern Parkway at Washington St.
Saturday, September 30, 12 noon & 4:00, and Sunday, October 1, 3:00, free with museum admission of $6 to $20
212-864-5400
www.brooklynmuseum.org
crossingthelinefestival.org
Moroccan dancer and choreographer Bouchra Ouizguen returns to FIAF’s Crossing the Line Festival this weekend with the New York premiere of the site-specific Corbeaux (Crows), reconfigured for the Brooklyn Museum’s Beaux-Arts Court. Ouizguen, who previously presented Madame Plaza at CTL 2010 and HA! at CTL 2013, made the piece for her Compagnie O as a one-time-only performance at the Marrakech train station for the 2014 Biennale of Contemporary Art, but it proved so popular that it has since made its way across the globe and finally comes to Brooklyn. “Corbeaux is one of the shows that enchants me the most because everything remains to be done. That is, even if it has been created, I have the impression each time that there are still things beyond my control. I wanted to give the sensation that it was taking place here in front of you and that it had not been prepared,” Ouizguen said in an October 2016 interview with Fondation d’entreprise Hermès. The work will feature an all-women ensemble in tight-fitting black costumes and white cloths knotted around their heads, weaving through the columns of the grand court, initially in silence, as human conceptions of time and space disappear. A kind of living sculpture, Corbeaux (Crows) is being staged September 30 at 12 noon and 4:00 and on October 1 at 3:00, free with museum admission.

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“Vines . . . are like internships,” Ulrich (Pascal Tagnati) tells Marc Châtaigne (Vincent Macaigne) in Antonin Peretjatko’s madcap colonialist farce, Struggle for Life. “Don’t drop one till you got another.” Nothing ever goes right for middle-aged schlemiel Châtaigne, who has been assigned by Rosio (Jean-Luc Bideau) of the Ministry of Standards to oversee the construction of an indoor ski resort in the jungles of Guiana; Guia-Snow, Rosio explains, will show South America that France can export a coveted resource, cold weather. Châtaigne’s contact in Guiana is lunatic bureaucrat Galgaric (Mathieu Amalric), who assigns him a driver named Tarzan (Vimala Pons), a grown woman who is interning with the Department of Forestry and Water and is in charge of renovating gardens. Soon Châtaigne and Tarzan are lost in the jungle, encountering a variety of oddballs, including Christian Duplex (Pascal Légitimus), Georges (Thomas De Pourquery), and Damien (Rodolphe Pauly), each of whom is somehow involved in either tearing down or saving the Amazon. Meanwhile, Châtaigne is being hunted by strange and skillful tax minister Maître Friquelin (Fred Tousch). They also meet up with dangerous insects and animals, cannibals, and parking meters. Jerry Lewis’s The Patsy meets Woody Allen’s Bananas in this hit-or-miss satire of French colonialism and government programs, in which interns are given a tremendous amount of power and responsibility, with director-cowriter Peretjatko (La Fille du 14 juillet) leaving no sight gag unturned. Yes, a lot of them are just plain stupid, but a whole bunch are just plain funny as well.