logo
‘It's ourselves and society on trial': playwright adapts Gisèle Pelicot case for stage

‘It's ourselves and society on trial': playwright adapts Gisèle Pelicot case for stage

The Guardian12 hours ago
A stage play based on the trial of the men who drugged and raped Gisèle Pelicot will be staged this week in the southern city of Avignon, as France continues to debate the lessons for society from the country's biggest ever rape trial.
The three-hour performance, The Pelicot Trial: Tribute to Gisèle Pelicot, has been created by Milo Rau, the Swiss director and playwright acclaimed for his theatre interpretations of court proceedings, including the Moscow trial of the Russian punks Pussy Riot and the trial of the Romanian despot Nicolae Ceaușescu.
The play has the backing of Pelicot's lawyers and feminist groups, and Rau says he felt compelled to turn the trial into a theatre piece: 'To have done nothing would have been like not speaking of Gaza or of Ukraine, it would have been a silence that's complicit.'
The director said the Pelicot piece was about looking at rape culture, the trivialisation of rape and patriarchy in all its forms. 'Through the Pelicot trial, it's ourselves and our society on trial,' he said.
Pelicot was hailed worldwide after she waived her right to anonymity to ensure a public trial of her ex-husband, Dominique Pelicot, who drugged her unconscious and invited dozens of men on an internet forum to come to her bedroom and rape her for almost a decade from 2011 in the southern village of Mazan. He was sentenced to 20 years in prison in December and guilty verdicts were returned for all the 51 accused men.
Gisèle Pelicot, who had said in court she wanted 'all of society to be a witness' and 'shame must change sides', was this week given France's top civic honour, the Legion d'Honneur, in recognition of her determination to expose and change what she called a 'macho, patriarchal society that trivialises rape'.
Rau, who worked with the playwright Servane Dècle to create the performance, said Pelicot's decision to choose a public trial instead of holding the case behind closed doors had in effect opened up the courtroom like a theatre. 'So we thought we should perhaps now turn the theatre into a courtroom,' he said.
The performance is made up of staged readings of extracts from the trial, police files, social commentary and psychiatric reports. It looks at the 51 convicted and the question of how these men, including a nurse, a soldier, a journalist, a prison warden and delivery drivers, aged from 26 to 74, could travel to Pelicot's home to rape her. More than 50 performers will read extracts from the trial, and those on stage will include a psychiatric expert from the case and court artists who were present at the trial.
Rau said it was important to stage the theatre piece in Avignon, where the trial took place and where crowds had gathered outside the court daily to cheer Gisèle Pelicot, and where the city walls were plastered with her quotes. It will be staged in a 14th-century open-air Carmelite cloister, with seats for 500 people, as part of the city's renowned theatre festival. But, with massive local interest, Rau said it would also be livestreamed in cinemas in Avignon as well as online.
Rau said he had resolved to create the piece while he was preparing another play, La Lettre, for the Avignon festival. Having tackled other major trials on stage, he said it would have been a 'kind of absurd silence' not to also work on the Pelicot case. 'In the German-speaking world, Avignon is not famous for the theatre festival, it's famous for the Pelicot trial.'
Pelicot's lawyers approved the idea, and journalists and researchers willingly gave Rau and Dècle thousands of pages of their notebooks to piece together the trial. 'It was clear for everyone that we had to do this, particularly here in Avignon and particularly now,' he said.
The trial presented difficult topics for staged readings. 'At the start, there were many different issues – the rapists themselves, rape culture, masculinity, the family, the spaces where this took place,' Rau said. 'And then we followed the line of the trial and the questions it raised in society, in the media, and in people's minds.'
The performance looks at the cross-examination of the accused men as well as their initial questioning by police, showing their shifting awareness of what was at stake. 'We see really what culture they're coming from, the patriarchal system, fraternity and rape culture that produces this,' Rau said. 'There was a moment of growing awareness in this city, but also in this country and in civilisation as a whole, to understand human relationships and how they have developed under a regime of capitalism, a regime of internet pornography, patriarchy, and drug-induced abuse.'
The piece underlined to him how 'omnipresent' rape was in society, Rau said.
A first performance took place at the Vienna festival last month, lasting seven hours, and the play will travel to other cities including Lisbon, Belgrade and Warsaw.
Dècle, the play's co-writer, said: 'It's about pulling at all the threads with the audience to understand what is it that made these men – who were so different from one another – converge on that bedroom, share recipes for drugging women, suggest women close to them who should also be raped, and doing all of that while having apparently ordinary lives. It's very important what this says about our society today.'
The Pelicot Trial: Tribute to Gisèle Pelicot, Avignon festival, 18 July and streamed online
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Romance scam victim travels 700km 'to marry French beauty queen'
Romance scam victim travels 700km 'to marry French beauty queen'

BBC News

time27 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Romance scam victim travels 700km 'to marry French beauty queen'

A Belgian man has travelled 760km (472 miles) to meet a French beauty queen he had been led to believe would be his future wife, only to realise he had been a victim of online romance 76, turned up at the home of Sophie Vouzelaud in France but was met by the model's told Ms Vouzelaud's husband, Fabien, he had paid €30,000 ($35,000) to the scammers and thought he had been in a romantic relationship for several weeks."I am an imbecile," the man said to the couple as he contemplated taking the long journey back. Michel's misadventure became known after a video of his unfortunate encounter with the couple was shared online by weeks, the Belgian - a widower of four years - had been communicating on WhatsApp with who he thought was Ms Vouzelaud, former Miss Limousin and first runner-up to Miss France in turned up outside the couple's property in Saint-Julien, some 420km (270 miles) south of Paris, on 9 July and according to Fabien said: "I am the future husband of Sophie Vouzelaud", to which he retorted: "Well, I'm the current one."Ms Vouzelaud, 38, then tried to explain to him that he had been swindled and the couple urged him to go to the police to file a complaint. It is not clear if he has done fraud is when someone is conned into sending money to a criminal who convinces them they are in a genuine relationship. How to avoid romance scams According to Action Fraud, signs of romance fraud include a person being secretive about their relationship or becoming hostile or angry when asked about their online may have sent, or be planning to send, money to someone they have never met in for protecting yourself against scams includes:Be suspicious of any requests for money from someone you have never met in person, particularly if you have only recently met onlineSpeak to your family or friends to get adviceProfile photos may not be genuine, so do your research first. Performing a reverse image search using a search engine can help you find photos that have been stolen from somewhere elseAdvice for supporting a victim of a scam includes:Reassure your loved one you are there for them and it is not their faultImprove your own understanding about romance scamsRemember to look after yourself, too - supporting someone through romance fraud can be toughSource: Action Fraud / Victim Support

Smugglers clash with French riot police after launching migrant boats
Smugglers clash with French riot police after launching migrant boats

Telegraph

timean hour ago

  • Telegraph

Smugglers clash with French riot police after launching migrant boats

French riot police clashed with people smugglers in a coastal town a day after hundreds of migrants arrived in the UK on small boats. The smugglers pelted officers with rocks and used engine oil to set fire to benches and debris in Gravelines in the early hours of Friday morning. Britain and France have agreed to crack down on illegal Channel crossings, with French authorities trying to stop them from leaving their shores. On Thursday, however, hundreds of migrants managed to evade French police and board dinghies bound for Britain. The Telegraph witnessed dozens of officers armed with riot shields, assault rifles and helmets deployed on the streets of the seaside town, north-east of Calais, on Friday. Volleys of tear gas from grenade launchers were fired at the smugglers during the short-lived confrontation, leaving the town wreathed in a veil of acrid white smoke. Barricades were set up near the exit point of the River Aa which runs through the centre of the town and is used as a departure point for 'taxi boats' by the smugglers. It is believed the smugglers assaulted the officers as a diversionary tactic to, unsuccessfully, try and secretly launch dinghies full with migrants to Dover. Some of the smugglers, who were of Middle Eastern origin, jeered and mocked the officers while filming on their phones. Two of the men were seen wearing bright orange life jackets around their necks. The disorder broke out at around 5:30 am and lasted approximately 20 minutes before the smugglers were dispersed and fled back to their camps near Loon-Plage, a short 15-minute drive away to the east. The clashes came after gendarmes failed to stop two dinghies crammed with approximately 70 migrants from sailing on Thursday morning from the shores of Gravelines beach to Dover. A salvo of tear gas had done little to stop the crowd of around 200 migrants, including a family with a six-year-old son and four-year-old girl from trying to climb on. On one of the dinghies, the smugglers had jumped overboard before the vessel was intercepted by a French police patrol boat and escorted into British waters. The smugglers were allowed to walk back to their camps unhindered and try again the following day. It is estimated that 320 migrants successfully arrived in the UK on Thursday via small boats. Sir Keir Starmer, in a meeting with Friedrich Merz, the German chancellor, in London that same day said he was 'very concerned' over smuggling routes through Germany. Sir Keir said the Government was determined to intervene at every stage of the people-smuggling journey, citing last week's agreement with France which allows the UK to return some migrants to France. He said: 'For a long time I've been very concerned about the fact that engines and component parts of the boats that are being used are travelling through and being stored in Germany. 'But they can't be seized because the law didn't accommodate for a country that had left the EU and therefore needed to be amended.'

'Hidden gem' murder mystery series rockets up Netflix charts as 'tense and compelling' scenes are compared to Michelle Keegan's Fool Me Once
'Hidden gem' murder mystery series rockets up Netflix charts as 'tense and compelling' scenes are compared to Michelle Keegan's Fool Me Once

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

'Hidden gem' murder mystery series rockets up Netflix charts as 'tense and compelling' scenes are compared to Michelle Keegan's Fool Me Once

A 'hidden gem' murder mystery series has rocketed up the Netflix charts thanks to its 'tense and compelling' scenes. The new hit, Under A Dark Sun, premiered on the streaming platform earlier this month and has proved to be popular. Created by Nils-Antoine Sambuc, the French drama consists of six episodes and follows young mother Alba Mazier (Ava Baya) who goes on the run. She faces accusations of killing her manager, Arnaud Lasserre (Thibault De Montalembert), at a flower farm and discovers he is her father. The series has been compared to the likes of Fool Me Once, starring Michelle Keegan and based on Harlan Coben's novels. Under A Dark Sun featured on the Top 10 Netflix shows chart, and has received some rave reviews. One watcher on IMDb rated it 7.5 out of ten and penned: 'Soleil Noir is a tense and intriguing French series that blends elements of drama, mystery, and crime. 'It has a dark, gripping atmosphere that keeps you on edge throughout.' While The Review Geek described it as 'compelling' but noted it was 'rough around the edges'. They wrote the series 'has a decent premise but it's also quite rough around the edges, in desperate need of some rewrites to sharpen how long-lasting its compelling central mystery cuts'. Another fan on IMDb rated it nine out of ten and gushed: 'This French series, full of soapy plot twists surrounding the death of a family patriarch, is well-shot and it's a very good choice for some hours of escapism, if you like fast-moving crime and mystery stories.' While someone else added: 'I was hooked; like my funny bone I laugh at things I tell myself I shouldn't at my age. So what?! 'Laughing makes me happy, as do improbable escapism. However, the plot deserved another 3-6 episodes to flesh out the biographies of the main characters, with teasers throughout for the bombshell in the last scene of the final episode. 'Verdict: all in all, though, the binge-watch was worth it.' Though not everyone has been impressed with the series and one viewer scored it a low three out of ten, arguing, 'Started good, ends awful'. While someone else only rated it one out of ten stars. They penned: 'This series is not good. The writing is abysmal. 'The story it is something between soap opera, rich family issues and a crime mystery and it fails in everything. 'Character's actions do not make any sense and the fact we barely know anything about them doesn't help either.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store