Fanny de Chaillé

Ultrasensibles

MC93 – Maison de la Culture de Seine-Saint-Denis
decemberdec 2 – 5
1/3

1h20

Prices €8 to €30
Subscribers €8 to €18

MC93 – Maison de la Culture de Seine-Saint-Denis
MC93 – Maison de la Culture de Seine-Saint-Denis
9, boulevard Lénine
93000 Bobigny
01 41 60 72 72

Metro Ligne 5 Station Bobigny – Pablo Picasso then walk 5 minutes 

Tramway T1 Station Hôtel-de-ville de Bobigny – Maison de la Culture

Bus 146, 148, 303, 615, 620 Bobigny Station - Pablo Picasso

Bus 134, 234, 251, 322, 301 Hôtel-de-ville Station

Vélib’ Stations Bobigny – Pablo-Picasso et Jean-Jaurès – Place de la Libération

Want to go

Wednesday december 2

20h

Thursday december 3

20h

Friday december 4

20h

Saturday december 5

16h

Concept and direction Fanny de Chaillé. With Margot Alexandre, Maudie Cosset-Chéneau, Luna Desmeules, Pierre Ripoll, Malo Martin, Tom Verschueren, Margot Viala and Valentine Vittoz. Musicians Sarah Murcia (double bass, keyboard) and Gilles Coronado (guitar). Assistant Christophe Ives. Music Sarah Murcia. Lighting Willy Cessa. Sound Manuel Coursin. Costumes Marie La Rocca, assisted by Françoise Léger. General stage management Emmanuel Bassibé. Sound operation François-Xavier Vilaverde.

Production tnba—Théâtre national  Bordeaux Aquitaine
Coproduction Théâtre de Nîmes, Scène conventionnée d’intérêt national—art et création—danse contemporaine ; Nouveau Théâtre de Besançon, centre dramatique national ; Le Lieu Unique—Scène nationale de Nantes ; Bonlieu Scène nationale Annecy ; MC93—Maison de la Culture de Seine-Saint-Denis
With the support of Prix Tremplin Leenaards / La Manufacture (Switzerland) 

The MC93 — Maison de la Culture de Seine-Saint-Denis and the Festival d’Automne à Paris present this performance in corealisation.

How can we rethink artistic creation from the starting point of our affects? Since 2020, Fanny de Chaillé and her performers have been turning towards a language of sensitivity, which does not shy away from love, fear, or tears. And in which music becomes a place of listening and resonance, reaffirming its status as an essential part of writing for the theatre.


A small, minute, departure from the norm, just enough to shift our point of view. This is precisely what Fanny de Chaillé endeavours to do in this new work, moving away from a long-standing French tradition of theatre as something cerebral and textual rather than affective and physical. Following in the line of the new historians of our sensibilities, Ultrasensibles rethinks the aesthetic form from the point of view of the sensations and emotions of the eight performers. Rather than recounting a history of the emotions, the piece looks into what it is that theatrical forms owe to the different sensitivities that traverse them. Our emotions are not supplementary to the soul: they are shaped in société, and play a part in the organisation of our ways of seeing and feeling. How, then, do affects transform the forms that are brought to the stage today—and those of the future? The director calls upon jazz musician Sarah Murcia on double-bass and Gilles Coronado on guitar. Music, which never fails to sharpen our senses, becomes interwoven with the verbal jousting, silences and bodily impulses, in a theatre of the affects, of an intentionally heated, intense kind.

In the same place