Following a sold-out premiere run of DIVINE at Dock11 in Berlin, Germany last May, Dock 11 is bringing it back for four more performances February 1 – 4 at their renowned theater.
Originally commissioned in 2022 by CRS, DIVINE began with a riddle: what could a lifelong ballerina, Megumi Eda, and a Butoh artist, Yuko Kaseki, create together? What resulted is a work of pathos, humor, and horror, a feminist meditation on traditional tales of women treated horrifically, specifically Giselle (made famous through ballet) and Oiwa, from the Yotsuya Kaidan (四谷怪談) which has been told in many forms but perhaps most famously in the Japanese Kabuki theater.
Both of these traditional stories were first adapted for the stage within a few years of each other in the early 19th century, and both depict women who are deceived and mistreated by their lovers. Giselle’s suitor hides from her that he is a nobleman and has no intention of marrying her. When she finds out, she dies of a broken heart. Oiwa’s face is burned by a younger, wealthy woman who wishes to steal her husband. Rather than come to her aid, Oiwa’s husband decides to divorce her and asks his friend to rape her to justify the divorce. She dies while resisting.
Working to an original sound score by award-winning composer Reiko Yamada, these two dancers, with their radically different approaches to movement, assume characters plagued with discomfort and instability in unfamiliar, distorted bodies. As these two figures from different worlds meet, they cross paths in sympathy with each other but are filled with confusion and feel the dissonance of their different realities. Their suffering and persistence echo the paths of Giselle and Oiwa and countless other women whose divine spirits have endured objectification, coercion, and violence in images and lives not of their own choosing or making.