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TWO MEN AND A CELLO – Tunisia 2002
Press
LA PRESSE DE TUNISIE 28.03.2002 (Asma Drissi: 24 hours of theatre in Kef - a beautiful celebration of theatre)
(...) Two Men and a Cello invaded the entire space of the Basilica located between Boumakhlouf and the Kasbah. Coming from Switzerland, they immediately caught the audience's interest. They explore the spatial configuration and give it structure in their choreography. This and the complicity between the musician and the dancer has created a performance beyond norms. It emerges from nowhere and brings life to stones and to an empty space that expressively reveals itself.
LA PRESSE DE TUNISIE 03.04.2002 (Héla Hazgui:
chameleon artists)
(...) No seats for the audience, no stage for the artists. Cello at hand, they stroll around the place, always followed by the crowd. They seem to emerge from walls as if guided by the phantoms of the place. In dancing and singing mongrel texts, their art erases distance and abolishes boundaries. They break with former rules. Art has no barriers, no language, no nationality. Art is quite simply emotion.
LE
QUOTIDIEN DE TUNIS 31.03.2002 (I.A.: A journey with the cello)
(...) Exploration of space is the fundamental ingredient in the success of this performance. "Two Men and a Cello" have combined various musical genres, drawing on German, French, English and Italian sources. To be seen and seen again.
LA TRIBUNE DE GENEVE 09.04.2002
(Benjamin Chaix: Philippe Olza returns from Tunisia)
(...) "Two men and a cello" returns from Tunisia. This performance, supported by the Art Council of Switzerland Pro Helvetia among others, played with success in six different locations in El Kef, Jendouba, Sfax and Tunis.

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