Juntos creamos un futuro sostenible

Gracias a tod@s por vuestra participación y compromiso: entre todos podemos consolidar un mundo más sostenible. Si colaboras con nuestra organización haremos grandes cosas. A tu ritmo, desde 1 euro al mes. Además de ayudarnos, obtendrás múltiples ventajas.

Tu experiencia artística HUE-CO2. Teaser

LONDON — The creature of “Frankenstein,” or “The Modern Prometheus,” as the author Mary Shelley subtitled her 1818 masterpiece, is perhaps literature’s most misunderstood and misrepresented character: more an infantile outcast longing for love than a vengeful monster chased by pitchfork-wielding mobs.

It is that misbegotten aspect that drew the choreographer Liam Scarlett to bring Shelley’s story to life in a full-length work for the Royal Ballet, running May 4-27.

While the thought of a dancing monster may strike some as funny — think Peter Boyle in a white-tie-and-tails routine with Gene Wilder in “Young Frankenstein” — for Mr. Scarlett it was a chance to reinterpret a story that has long enthralled, and often baffled, readers and audiences.

Echa un vistazo

-Siempre nos ha gustado ir por libre, y a pesar de que no sea el mejor momento, con eventos asfixiados por la emergencia sanitaria, en un entorno tóxico y dinámicas sociales tan disruptivas, seguimos al pie del cañón con una sonrisa que se aprecia hasta bajo la mascarilla. -Os ofreceremos el montaje del video de […]

Metrópolis de Teatro Che y Moche

LONDON — The creature of “Frankenstein,” or “The Modern Prometheus,” as the author Mary Shelley subtitled her 1818 masterpiece, is perhaps literature’s most misunderstood and misrepresented character: more an infantile outcast longing for love than a vengeful monster chased by pitchfork-wielding mobs.

It is that misbegotten aspect that drew the choreographer Liam Scarlett to bring Shelley’s story to life in a full-length work for the Royal Ballet, running May 4-27.

While the thought of a dancing monster may strike some as funny — think Peter Boyle in a white-tie-and-tails routine with Gene Wilder in “Young Frankenstein” — for Mr. Scarlett it was a chance to reinterpret a story that has long enthralled, and often baffled, readers and audiences.