ISJ-ISC LA ROCHE - ASFA BIRMINGHAM

Exchange programme between the ALABAMA SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS (Birmingham, Alabama) and l'INSTITUT SAINT-JOSEPH SACRE-COEUR (La Roche-en-Ardenne, Belgium)




lundi 4 avril 2016

Festival Multidingues

Dear friends,

Two weeks ago, we took part in the MULTID(L)INGUES FESTIVAL.
Schools are invited to play 10 minute sketches.  We chose "21", a spoken-word poem written by Patrick Roche.  This poem went viral in early 2014 and is about the family consequences of alcoholism.
It was difficult to get up on stage in front of other students but we tried to deliver our best performance...



 
 
           

A video of the last rehearsal :



     


The text we read as introduction :


Patrick Roche, un nom qui ne vous dit sans doute pas grand-chose, mais pourtant prédestiné puisque nous sommes élèves à l’Institut St-Joseph Sacré-Cœur de La Roche.  Ce jeune étudiant de l’université de Princeton dans le New Jersey fit pourtant le buzz sur internet en 2014 grâce à une vidéo intitulée « Twenty-One », 21.  On y découvre Patrick Roche en train de réciter un poème en slam lors d’un tournoi de poésie dans le Colorado. Le slam est un moment d’échanges, de joutes verbales, de mise en jeu de la voix, des mots et des émotions. A chacun ses mots et ses maux, sa voix et sa voie.  Un texte original, pas de costume, pas d’accessoire, pas de musique.

Patrick Roche a grandi avec un père alcoolique.  Son poème relate, d’une manière très touchante, l’addiction de son père et la souffrance devenue contagieuse pour son entourage. Cette terrible maladie conduisit finalement son père à la mort.  Lors d’un tournoi de slam, les performances ne peuvent dépasser 3 minutes, mais nous sommes en première année d’anglais, nous ne parviendrons pas à égaler Patrick Roche… Le poème est construit d’une manière très originale, notre classe de 3eR vous la laisse découvrir…  Ames sensibles, préparez vos mouchoirs ! 

The full text of the poem here :


Patrick Roche, 21
21. My father is run over by a car.
He is passed out in the road with a blood alcohol content
4 times the legal limit.
I do not cry.
Four months later,
The nurses lose his pulse,
And I wonder whose life
Flashed before his eyes.
Rewinding VHS tapes
Old home videos
20.
19. I haven't brought a friend home in four years.
18. My mother sips the word "divorce"
Her mouth curls at the taste
Like it burns going down.
17. I start doing homework at Starbucks.
I have more meaningful conversations with the barista
Than with my family
16. I wait for Christmas Eve.
My brother and I usually exchange gifts to one another early
This year, he
And my father exchange blows.
My mother doesn't go to mass. 
15. I come up with the theory that my father started drinking again
Because maybe he found out I'm gay.
Like if he could make everything else blurry,
Maybe somehow I'd look straight.
15. My mother cleans up his vomit in the middle of the night
And cooks breakfast in the morning like she hasn't lost her appetite.
15. I blame myself.
15. My brother blames everyone else.
15. My mother blames the dog.
15. Super Bowl Sunday
My father bursts through the door like an avalanche
Picking up speed and debris as he falls
Banisters, coffee tables, picture frames
Tumbling, stumbling.
I find his AA chip on the kitchen counter.
14. My father's been sober for 10,
Maybe 11, years?
I just know
We don't even think about it anymore.
13.
12.
11. Mom tells me Daddy's "meetings" are for AA.
She asks if I know what that means.
I don't.
I nod anyway.
10. My parents never drink wine at family gatherings.
All my other aunts and uncles do.
I get distracted by the TV and forget to ask why.
9.
8.
7.
6. I want to be Spider-Man.
Or my dad.
They're kinda the same.
5.
4.
3. I have a nightmare
The recurring one about Ursula from The Little Mermaid
So I get up
I waddle toward Mommy and Daddy's room,
Blankie in hand,
I pause.
Daddy's standing in his underwear
Silhouetted by refrigerator light.
He raises a bottle
To his lips.
2.
1.
0. When my mother was pregnant with me,
I wonder if she hoped,
As so many mothers do,
That her baby boy would grow up to be
Just like
His father

 The original video here

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