Who Killed My Father
Grec Festival de Barcelona
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Teatre Lliure Plaça Margarida Xirgu 1, 08003 Barcelona

Image courtesy of Grec Festival
“I became a writer because I was angry,” French author Édouard Louis has explained in several interviews. This is clear from reading Qui a tué mon père (Who Killed My Father), written in the form of an angry letter to the author’s dad, which combines the personal and the political by bringing together a series of family memories and scathing criticism of the system in which we live.
The author’s own biography is the raw material for his books. In this case, the starting point is a visit to his father after a long time apart. The man he finds is completely unrecognizable, broken by his penchant for alcohol, long years of hard work and the consequences of an accident.
What has been the role of political decisions, such as public spending cuts, in his father’s downfall and that of so many others? The author asks this question in a particularly harsh and intense text that attacks capitalism, portrays social inequality in modern-day France, relives scenes from his upbringing in a working-class family, and reflects the all-pervasive homophobia. The author seeks to show how political history is also personal history and that the decisions made by the president of a country can be as intimate as those between a father and son. The book’s power is evidenced by the fact that it’s been adapted for the stage in recent years by directors as influential as Ivo van Hove himself, Thomas Ostermeier and Italian creators Daria Deflorian and Antonio Tagliarini.
The show will be in Dutch with subtitles in Catalan.
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