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Dagoll Dagom begins its farewell with homage to Rusiñol

Marc Rosich, Andreu Gallén and Ariadna Peya combine for one last time to produce a musical adaptation of the 19th century play, L’alegria que passa

Last month, the Dagoll Dagom the­atre com­pany pre­miered an adap­ta­tion of San­ti­ago Rusiñol’s L’ale­gria que passa at the Po­lio­rama The­atre. The show runs until April 30 and has been an­nounced as the last in the group’s 50-year ca­reer. With An­ta­viana and the music of Sisa, it has been the flag­ship mu­si­cal the­atre com­pany in the Cata­lan lan­guage since 1978. The pro­ducer Anna Rosa Cisquella (the last ac­tive mem­ber of the his­tor­i­cal tri­umvi­rate that in­cluded Joan Lluís Bozzo and Miquel Periel) has res­cued a rein­ter­preted work from long ago. Now it re­turns, how­ever, thanks to the adap­ta­tion by Marc Rosich, the mu­si­cal com­po­si­tion of An­dreu Gallén and a very phys­i­cal chore­og­ra­phy de­vised by Ari­adna Peya.

The piece re­counts the hes­i­tancy of the mayor’s son be­tween ac­cept­ing the mo­not­ony and se­cu­rity of the vil­lage or being car­ried away by his in­fat­u­a­tion with a va­ri­ety com­pany singer, who, for her part, dreams of the tran­quil­ity of a fire­place. The worlds of fac­tory work­ers and artists are con­trasted and there is an un­ex­pected re­ac­tion by the fac­tory owner.

A huge chal­lenge

L’ale­gria que passa poses a huge chal­lenge be­cause all the per­form­ers ex­change roles: they are at once the mu­si­cians of the scene and also ac­tors. Now, in ad­di­tion, each actor plays char­ac­ters from the grey city and from the com­pany of artists. It is a very phys­i­cal play, the chore­og­ra­phy re­in­forc­ing the two con­trast­ing worlds that face up to one an­other. The plot al­lows the pub­lic to find rea­sons for the be­hav­iour of both cit­i­zens and itin­er­ant artists: the char­ac­ters are hu­man­ised by their con­tra­dic­tions.

In re­al­ity, the ac­tors have a more pow­er­ful char­ac­ter in one group than in the other, in which they play a more ac­com­pa­ny­ing role. The only actor whose two mind­sets re­main fairly bal­anced is Àngels Gonyalons, play­ing both the mayor (who tries to wake the town up with the hir­ing of the com­pany) and the di­rec­tor of the troupe, who cel­e­brates hav­ing a place to per­form. Of the nine per­form­ers, Gonyalons is the longest serv­ing with Dagoll, along with Mar­i­ona Castillo, who starred in Cop de rock in 2011. Gonyalons cel­e­brates the eclec­ti­cism of a work that seeks the total art pur­sued by Rusiñol.

fea­ture the­atre

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