Festival d'Avignon

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File:Avignon festival 2006 asobu popes palace.jpg
A main venue of the 60th (2006) Avignon Theatre Festival staged at the Popes' Palace, featuring Asobu, a play by the festival artistic associate Josef Nadj (fifth from the left).

The Festival d'Avignon, or Avignon Festival, is an annual arts festival held in the French city of Avignon every summer in July in the courtyard of the Popes' Palace as well as in other locations of the city. Founded in 1947 by Jean Vilar, it is the oldest extant festival in France and one of the world's greatest. Alongside the official festival, the "In" one, a number of shows are presented in Avignon at the same time of the year and are known as the "Off".

In 2008, some 950 shows were performed during three weeks.

The Birth of a Festival

1947, The Week of Scenic Arts

Art critic Christian Zervos and poet René Char organized a modern art exhibition held in the main chapel of the Pope's Palace in Avignon. In that setting, they asked Jean Vilar, actor, director, theater director, and future festival founder, to present Meurtre dans la cathédrale which he adapted in 1945.

After refusing, Vilar proposed three plays: Shakespeare's Richard II, a play well known in France, La Terrasse de midi, by Maurice Clavel, then unknown author, and L'Histoire de Tobie et de Sara by Paul Claudel.[1]

The "In" Festival

The festival is organised by a non-profit organisation (since 1980), which is administered by a board of trustees composed of: the French state, the city of Avignon, the Département of Vaucluse, the Région Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, and seven public figures competent in the field of theatre. Amongst other places, the "In" Festival is performed in the "Cour d'Honneur" - the honours courtyard - of the Palais des Papes, the place of residence of the Avignon papacy during most of the 14th century.

The "Off" Festival

The "Off" festival is also organised by a non-profit organisation composed mostly of theatre companies and is performed in theaters schools, streets and all places suitable for performing.

History

The Festival d'Avignon was founded by Jean Vilar in 1947-1984.

Jean Vilar was invited to present his first great successful play - Murder in the Cathedral by T.S. Eliot in the Popes Palace. At the same moment and at the same place, an exhibition of contemporary paintings and sculptures was organised by Christian Zervos, an art critic and collector, and by René Char, the poet.

Vilar initially refused the invitation as for him the Cour d'Honneur of the Popes Palace was too vast and "shapeless" and he also lost the performance rights of the play. However, he proposed three creations : Shakespeare's Richard II, one of the Bard's plays that was little known at the time in France; Paul Claudel's Tobie et Sara (Tobie and Sara), and Maurice Clavel's second play, La Terrasse de Midi (The Midday Terrace). The very first Festival d'Avignon in September 1947 set the scene as a showcase for unknown work and modern scripts.

Upon obtaining initial success, the festival begins enjoying the contribution of many young talents. Among the acteurs and actresses invited by Villard, one finds the following: Jean Négroni, Germaine Montero, Alain Cuny, Michel Bouquet, Jean-Pierre Jorris, Silvia Montfort, Jeanne Moreau, Daniel Sorano, Maria Casarès, Philippe Noiret, Monique Chaumette, Jean Le Poulain, Charles Denner, Jean Deschamps, Georges Wilson, and Gérard Philipe.

The festival's success grows, in spite of criticisms, which are at times virulent. Vilard's idea of a "popular theatre" moves critics to refer to Vilard variably as "stalinist", "fascist", "populist", or "cosmopolitan".

On the other hand, Vilard's conception of the theatre remains conservative with respect to competing conceptions developed especially in the course of the 1960s. On the crest of the wave of contemporary tendencies to revolutionize theatrical practices, in 1966 Avignon's Théâtre des Carmes, cofounded by André Benedetto and Bertrand Hurault, stages a festival « Off », unofficial and independent. The following year, Benedetto's theatre is joined by other kindred theatrical companies.

In response to the "Off" challenge, in 1967 Jean Vilar gives rise to the festival of the "Court of Honor of the Popes' Palace" (la Cour d'honneur du Palais des papes). Thenceforth, numerous further sites will be chosen to stage the festival's theatrical representations.

Vilar will direct the festival until his death, in 1971. On that year, Vilard's "Inn" festival includes thirty-eight shows.

Strikes during the Festival

Due to the anti-authoritarian protest movements of the May of 1968, the 22nd edition of the Festival of Avignon hosts virtually no French show, halving the number of planned shows down from a total of 83. Relatively unaffected are the shows of the "Living Theatre", Maurice Béjart's representations at the Court of Honnor, as well as various film viewings taking advantage of that same year's cancellation of the Festival of Cannes.

Béjart's July 19 show in the Court of Honnor is disrupted by Saul Gottlieb, a viewer who enter the stage to call Béjart to halt his show. Towards the end of the show, the comedians of the "Théâtre du Chêne Noir," from the "Off" festival, erupt on the scene, forcing Béjart's dancers to improvise around them.

In 2003 seven hundred and fifty shows were anticipated, prior to the festival's being cancelled for the year due to strikes by the show business's "casual workers" ("intermittents") protesting to reform indemnation laws. Approximately one hundred of the "Off" festival's shows were cancelled, as well.

In July the 3rd 2014, the festival committee has voted 224 votes against 110 (4 votes of abstention) a strike during the event in support of the recent claims of the intermittent workers about their unemployment insurance.

This echoes a similar decision taken during the 2003 festival and which had strongly disrupted schedules.

Research Archives

Archives on the works of Jean Vilar and the totality of the 3,000 representations programmed by the Festival of Avignon since its 1947 debut are conserved at Maison Jean-Vilar, located in Avignon at 8, rue de Mons, Montée Paul-Puaux. The Maison houses most notably a library, videotheque, expositions and database.[2]

The Association Jean Vilar publishes the review journal, Les Cahiers Jean Vilar, which inscribes the thought of the festival's ideator in a resolutely contemporary context, analysing the place of theatre in society, as well as political stakes involved in theatrical production.

External links

References

  1. « Histoire », Site of the festival d'Avignon
  2. Site de la Maison Jean-Vilar