All The Times I Did Not See Potsdam

Left to right: Heloise Wilson, Mouna R’miki, Mischa Ipp, Marisela Grajeda Gonzalez. Photo by Bruna Lacerda.
All The Times I Did Not See Potsdam by Heloise Wilson is an experimental and whimsical show about happenstance and hope. While a solar eclipse approaches, four women meet in the cafeteria of a German Palace to untangle what brought them there. Part art installation, part theatre performance, All The Times I Did Not See Potsdam is a non-linear piece in eight languages exploring missed opportunities and the emotional maps we build for ourselves. This production is comprised of a mostly female-identifying and non-binary creative team and features the international talents of performers from Morocco, France, Australia, Haiti, Canada, Venezuela, and the U.S. It is a unique opportunity to see a multilingual, global story that is not American-centric; a style rarely found in the New York theatre scene. The play examines immigration, terrible airport experiences, and displacement with humour, vulnerability, and poetry. Each audience member will receive a booklet during the play, containing the secret lives of the characters - thoughts, memories, photographs and texts that are in continuation of the play.
All The Times I Did Not See Potsdam by Heloise Wilson is an experimental and whimsical show about happenstance and hope. While a solar eclipse approaches, four women meet in the cafeteria of a German Palace to untangle what brought them there. Part art installation, part theatre performance, All The Times I Did Not See Potsdam is a non-linear piece in eight languages exploring missed opportunities and the emotional maps we build for ourselves. This production is comprised of a mostly female-identifying and non-binary creative team and features the international talents of performers from Morocco, France, Australia, Haiti, Canada, Venezuela, and the U.S. It is a unique opportunity to see a multilingual, global story that is not American-centric; a style rarely found in the New York theatre scene. The play examines immigration, terrible airport experiences, and displacement with humour, vulnerability, and poetry. Each audience member will receive a booklet during the play, containing the secret lives of the characters - thoughts, memories, photographs and texts that are in continuation of the play.

location-icon The Plaxall Gallery
5-25 46th Ave, Long Island City, NY 11101
Queens
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