14. - 16. May 2006
19.00 – 20.00
7. - 8. June 2006
19.00 – 20.00
10. March 2007
19.00 – 20.00
29. June 2007
22.00 – 23.00
10. September 2007
18.15 – 19.15
10. August 2007
22.00 – 23.00
10. September 2007
22.00 – 23.00
9. - 10. November 2007
23.00 – 0.00
12. - 13. December 2007
23.00 – 0.00
22. April 2008
18.30 – 19.30
12. - 13. January 2009
23.00 – 0.00
17. March 2009
19.00 – 20.00
3. April 2009
22.00 – 23.00
25. June 2009
22.00 – 23.00
20. July 2009
22.00 – 23.00
27. August 2009
22.00 – 23.00
23. September 2009
17.30 – 18.30
16. April 2010
22.00 – 23.00
9. June 2010
22.00 – 23.00
22. March 2011
19.00 – 20.00
15. May 2012
18.00 – 19.00

Večna medikacija / Endless Medication

Endless Medication is a theatre event created in
2003 by the Flemish performance artist Marijs Boulogne. After a successful presentation at City of Women festival in 2005 the Association City of Women decided to produce a Slovene and Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian language adaptation of the performance. The Slovene version premiered in 2006 and the BCS in 2007. 

 Endless Medication tells the story of Rosa, a girl who
cannot weep. She is made pregnant by the
JesusChristMachine - possibly a reference to Heiner
Müller’s Hamletmachine - and is soon to give birth -
through her intestines - to God’s grandson. God appears
in the form of a talking bulb and the pregnancy takes on
the form of a watermelon growing under Rosa’s skirt.
Because the child is developing in Rosa’s intestines it
encumbers her metabolism: the watermelon must be
cut/aborted. With God’s help Rosa finally gives birth
(from her leg) to a little boy who never cries. The story
ends with Rosa’s incarceration in a madhouse, an infanticide,
and a trial in which Rosa is condemned to endless
medication.

The performance is realised in the basic inventive style
of fairground theatre. Marijs Boulogne treats the tricks
of theatre in a childlike, lucid, but also perverse manner.
A scatologic potence is hidden behind the apparent
innocence of these two energetic, jolly, carefree girls.
As a result of its subject - the conception and birth of
the grandson of God, as well as the unforced, self-evident
way in which they handle obscenity and violence,
engenders a form of religiously-tinted pornography..

The name of the girl - Rosa - derives from the Saint Rosa
of Lima (1586-1617), and similarly to the experiences of
many female mystics from that period, religious ecstasy
all too easily turns into highly sexually charged delirium.
The sacral and blasphemous go hand in hand. As with
Boulogne’s later projects, Endless Medication is dominated
by a radical, female corporality with particular focus
on the interior of the body. Rather than the breasts or
the belly she is interested in the cunt and the intestines,
shit, menstruation and bodily fluids in general. The
disorder that Rosa’s pregnancy causes her body finds its
antithesis in the chaos, filth and dirt left behind on the
stage at the end of the performance. At the same time
this work can also be seen within the context of Flemish
historical sensibilities re the grotesque, the macabre and
the vital.
Marianne Van Kerkhoven.

Adaptation of the theatre performance Endless Medication
Direction and adaptation: Simona Semenič and Marijs Boulogne
Performers: Barbara Kranjc and Jelena Rusjan

Dramaturgy:
Jerneja Kušar
Light design: Janko Oven
Costumes: Nina Holc
Accordion mentor: Maja Vujanović
Text: Marijs Boulogne, Slovenian translation: Tanja Lesničar Pučko, BSC translation: Jelena Petrović
Production: City of Women

 

Theatre performance supported by Ministry of Culture RS and Municipality of Ljubljana.

More instances

14 - 16/05/2006
19.00 – 20.00
07 - 08/06/2006
19.00 – 20.00
10/03/2007
19.00 – 20.00
10/09/2007
18.15 – 19.15
10/08/2007
22.00 – 23.00
09 - 10/11/2007
23.00 – 0.00
22/04/2008
18.30 – 19.30
12 - 13/01/2009
23.00 – 0.00
17/03/2009
19.00 – 20.00
03/04/2009
22.00 – 23.00
20/07/2009
22.00 – 23.00
27/08/2009
22.00 – 23.00
23/09/2009
17.30 – 18.30
16/04/2010
22.00 – 23.00
09/06/2010
22.00 – 23.00
22/03/2011
19.00 – 20.00
15/05/2012
18.00 – 19.00
Artists and collaborators
MARIJS BOULOGNE
Simona Semenič