William Kentridge’s
The Great Yes, The Great No
A Cal Performances Co-commission
Bay Area Premiere
Mar 16, 3pm
William Kentridge, concept and director
Nhlanhla Mahlangu, associate director and choral composer
Phala O. Phala, associate director
Thulani Chauke, dancer
Teresa Phuti Mojela, dancer
Internationally acclaimed for his visual art and theater productions, South African artist William Kentridge returns to campus with his latest creation for the stage, a chamber opera set on a 1941 sea voyage from Marseille to Martinique. Conceived in collaboration with theater maker Phala Ookeditse Phala and choral conductor and dancer Nhlanhla Mahlangu, The Great Yes, The Great No fictionalizes the historic wartime escape from Vichy France by, among others, the surrealist André Breton, the anthropologist Claude Lévi-Strauss, and the Cuban artist Wilfredo Lam—and adds a distinguished and colorful cast of characters to the passenger list, like Aimé Césaire, Josephine Baker, Leon Trotsky, Diego Rivera, Frida Kahlo, and Joseph Stalin.
In Kentridge’s hands, the ship becomes a fantastical menagerie of thinkers, makers, and revolutionaries in a production that merges surrealist imagery with real-life events, lush South African choral music, dance, poetry, and anti-rational approaches to language and image. Kentridge’s breathtaking visual inventiveness combines animated drawings, video projection, masks, shadow play, and bold sculptural costumes with spoken and projected text that explores the relationship between surrealism and the anticolonial Négritude movement.
The San Francisco Chronicle raved about SIBYL, Kentridge’s 2023 presentation at Cal Performances, so get your tickets now!
English translations will be projected on a backdrop screen.
Support for this performance is provided by The Great Yes, The Great No Council for Kentridge.
Lead Sponsor: Nadine Tang
Major Sponsors: Bob Ellis (March 15); Janice and Nicholas E. Brathwaite (March 15)
Sponsors: The Edgar Foster Daniels Foundation; Divesh & Diksha Makan
Commissioning support is provided by William and Sakurako Fisher.
This event is part of Cal Performances’ Illuminations: “Fractured History” programming for the 2024–25 season.
Mar 16, 3pm