The Will to Build (2010 Revival Version)
Exploring five key elements - space, pace, functionality, spirituality and identity, The Will to Build examines the past, present and future of Hong Kong’s relentless cycle of construction and destruction, and its effects on the bodies, hearts and minds of the city’s inhabitants.
This powerful drama skillfully weaves together verbatim transcripts of Theatre du Pif’s interviews with real people who are intimately involved in and affected by the city’s obstinate will to build: construction workers, architects, planners, academics, farmers, politicians, cage-dwellers...
In 2008, Theatre du Pif launched an innovative Hong Kong-UK collaboration in verbatim theatre, with UK video artists Burst TV and British writer Liam Hurley. Queen's Pier. Star Ferry Pier. Wedding Card Street. Graham Street Market. Old Central Police Station. The irreplaceable heart of Hong Kong, or merely irrelevant, unprofitable bricks-and-mortar?
In Nov 08, as the closing performance at the New Vision Arts Festival, Theatre du Pif collaborated with BURST TV, a London-based collective of multi-media artists, and Liam Hurley, a young British theatre practitioner, in a provocative piece of "verbatim theatre" that stimulated debate about the value of Hong Kong's built heritage. This production also celebrated the 60th anniversary of British Council in Hong Kong.
In 2010, the show was restaged in Hong Kong and at the Shanghai Expo 2010. The new version in 2015 continued to stimulate debate about the value of Hong Kong’s built heritage.
In 2008, activist Chu Hoi-dik mentioned during the Queen’s Pier movement, “a small group of HK people have newly discovered some ‘treasure boxes’ and accidentally opened them. They were shocked and amazed to discover that they have another ‘history’ or past, which helps them to develop their own identity; a new identity in order to fight against the mainstream one.” Seven years later, more boxes were opened. They were no longer only connected to “the past” or “memory”, but are more about the different “possibilities” for the future. After the Umbrella Movement in 2014, things seem like they are “back to normal”, but what kind of energy has the commotion and feeling aroused transformed into? In which direction will our city move towards?
