Robot show is more than mechanical
Franz Kafka's seminal work The Metamorphosis is famous for its themes of alienation, absurdity and now androids, as a robot takes center stage in a new theatrical adaptation.
Acclaimed Japanese director Oriza Hirata worked with leading roboticist Hiroshi Ishiguro to create the star of the show, a tall gangly robot with a metal skeleton and white human-like face and hands.
"Even though people react when they see a robot, you can tell people are not moved by it," Hirata says.
A robot with a metal skeleton and white human-like face and hands plays the lead role in a Japanese theatrical adaptation of Franz Kafka's The Metamorphosis. Agence France-Presse |
"I wanted to create a situation in which a robot could move an audience."
In Kafka's 1915 novella, traveling salesman Gregor Samsa wakes up one morning inexplicably transformed into a repulsive insect, causing his family to hide him away in shame and disgust.
Hirata's production swaps the big bug for a cold silver frame and an automated voice, testing the dramatic timing of four French actors chosen to play his family.
The company - robot included - worked on the play for a month in the remote town of Kinosaki in western Japan.
The show, titled La Metamorphose version Androide, opened for a short run in Yokohama on Thursday and then will travel to Europe to kick off the Autumn Festival Normandy next month in France.
Award-winning actress Irene Jacob praised the acting skills of her on stage android son.
"It's a bit like a white mask, as we say in French 'masque blanc', in theater," she says.
"It has something quite theatrical all right ... sometimes he can smile a little bit or even laugh."
Some may see the robot as a canny choice to illustrate the book's discussion of isolation in modern capitalist society, which resonates in the technology-obsessed present day, nearly 100 years since the story was published.
Ishiguro, head of a robotics lab at Osaka University, is a well-known figure in Japan who has already staged several plays featuring robots with Hirata.
But this is the first to be performed in a language other than Japanese - the production is in French with Japanese subtitles.
In the past, Ishiguro has created a robot based on himself, an android newscaster and a cheeky talking humanoid robot called Pepper.
Agence France-Presse