Your Logo Can Be Here Now!

Contact us for more details

Pierrot Lunaire

5.3
09 February 2014 · Music, Drama · 51 mins

Invited by the conductor Premil Petrovic to stage Arnold Schoenberg’s Pierrot Lunaire, a musical theater work from 1912 based on the poems of Albert Giraud, LaBruce transposed a strange and tragic episode of true crime onto the composition. Complementing the original atonal score is a narrative about a trans man who is outed by his girlfriend’s father and forbidden from seeing the young woman again. Crestfallen, the protagonist decides to prove the fact of his manhood by castrating a taxi driver and then revealing his newly transplanted member to the two of them. This story, which for LaBruce “serves as a kind of allegory for all gender radicals and outcasts driven to extremes by the disapproval and hostility of the dominant order,” is rendered in a visual style that nods to the era of Schoenberg’s melodrama. LaBruce cheekily appropriates the formal vocabulary of silent cinema with black-and-white photography, irises, and intertitles like “A cock, a cock, my kingdom for a cock!”

  • Susanne Sachße
    Susanne Sachße
    Pierrot Lunaire
  • Paulina Bachmann
    Paulina Bachmann
  • Bruce LaBruce
    Bruce LaBruce

Also...

4 Moons
Tove
Bump Up Business
The Boy and the Wind
Edge of Seventeen
Opening Night
Before Night Falls
Love Is the Devil: Study for a Portrait of Francis Bacon
Male Shorts: International V2
The Younger
Vassalord.
Smalltown Boys
Prayers for Bobby
Adult
In from the Side
All of Us Strangers
Broken Sky
Naked Boys Singing!
It Is Not the Brazilian Homosexuals Who Are Perverse, But the Situation in Which They Live
What She Likes