Ruy Blas

Closing
Ruy Blas

TitleRuy Blas
CountryFrance
Production CompanyLes Moutons Noirs
Date2016-05-14~2016-05-15
Time14th(SAT),15th(SUN)17:00
Age restriction12rating
Running time100min
VenueBusan Cultural Center Main Hall
GenreVictor Hugo
Ticket1F-25000won 2F-20000

-The performances are provided with ENG and KOR subtitles.


 Ruy Blas, a simple servant, is used by his master, Don Salluste, a fallen Spanish nobleman, who wants to have his revenge on the queen.

Don Salluste asks his valet, Ruy Blas, to pretend to be his nephew, Don César, in order to seduce the queen and therefore to confound her. Ruy Blas, who is secretly in love with the queen, is happy to comply. Don Salluste’s evil plan is now in motion.

Conspiracies, power, vengeance, impossible love. Every elements of a perfect romantic drama are part of this play.

What will Don Salluste do to fulfill his vengeance? What will the two lovers become?


Created 5 years ago by Axel Drhey, Roland Bruit, Bertrand Saunier, Paola Secret and Yannick Laubin, the company Les Moutons Noirs, that gathers many talents, imaginative minds and visions, offers its multidiscipline artists the possibility to express their singularity and their creativity.

In 2010, Les Moutons Noirs adapt ‘The Miser‘ with a modern staging, dealing with modern issues such as old age or Alzheimer’s disease, while remaining faithful to the original play. Les Moutons Noirs surprise us and give us a modern and original adaptation of Moliere’s piece.

In 2012, they explore the Russian literature and present “About Love”, Three stories by Anton Chekhov: The Proposal, On the Harmful Effects of Tobacco and The Bear. Thanks to a new translation by Virginie Symaniec and a staging inspired by popular theater, Les Moutons Noirs boldly mix the crazy Russian mind and the incisive frivolity of Italy in a dark and absurd comedy where madness and brutality balance perfectly.

Les Moutons Noirs impose their style and share a common idea: explore comedy as much as tragedy, without limitations or boundaries, revisit great stories and great writers, and tell stories with modesty and panache.

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