يحاول ذهب - حر
JUBILANT REVIVAL OF AN ANCIENT ART
September 15, 2025
|Los Angeles Times
Jeff Hull's 'The Cortège,' at the Los Angeles Equestrian Center, reimagines the funeral procession as a communal journey through life and loss that's full of wonder
EMIL RAVELO For The Times A PERFORMER moves through towering figures in "The Cortège," a theatrical show created by artist Jeff Hull, who looks to explore the collective human experience.
Tell someone about “The Cortège,” and it may inspire as much apprehension as it does curiosity.
A theatrical procession running this month at the Los Angeles Equestrian Center, “The Cortège” promises to explore grief, loss, mourning and our collective disconnection from one another. It’s a dramatic interpretation of a funeral, albeit one with jubilant street-inspired dance and a Sasquatch-like creature. And robots and drones.
I arrived at “The Cortège” just weeks removed from attending a very real, deeply personal funeral for my mother. Did I want to revisit that space as part of my weekend's entertainment, and would the show inspire a new round of tears? The answer to both turned out to be yes.
For “The Cortège” approaches a difficult subject matter with an imaginative question: What if we explore grief not with isolation or solemness, but with wonder? It’s a prompt that's ripe for an era of divisive politics, financial stress and often isolating technology.
Beginning at twilight and extending into the evening, “The Cortège” starts with an overture, a six-piece band performing in the center of the field. We're seated either on the grass on portable pads with backs or in folding chairs on an elevated platform.
Soon, a mist erupts on a far end of the field; a lone figure emerges who crawls and then walks to the center. He'll move in place for much of the show, remaining silent as a fantastical life transpires around him — dancers, ornately costumed characters and larger-than-life puppets will surreally reflect the journey of life.
هذه القصة من طبعة September 15, 2025 من Los Angeles Times.
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