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Hairkunft

“Losing your hair is easy. Redistributing it, not so much.”

(Hendrik Quast)

Hendrik Quast’s hair abandoned him, right when he most longed for glorious locks to help him slip into his new role in the art world and climb the social ladder. To secure his place in the middle class, Quast needed a defensive (hair)line!

As he learned from Simba in The Lion King, a full mane symbolizes status and class. So Hendrik Quast got himself a hair transplant. This phase of his hair-story was bloody, painful, expensive and risky: The surgery as a durational performance used real, home-grown hair—no wigs here, folks! Would his working-class roots nourish the newly planted hairs? Can hereditary hair loss be overcome this way? What remains, if his chronically ill body rejects the new hair?

In a madcap performance, Hendrik Quast uses his scalp to explore his hair-itage. Combining elements of stand-up, musicals, body art and crowd work he sheds light on the contradictory nature of his queer and shame-filled journey across class boundaries. Quast brings the ghosts of his experience of class mobility on stage, caught between his roots and the future, questioning the price of social rise, redistributes its costs and owes nothing to anyone.

Premiere: Sophiensæle Berlin 18.10.2024 18:00

 

Tourdates

13. + 14.12.24: Sophiensaele Berlin Infos

06. / 07. / 08.02.24: Kampnagel Hamburg Infos

22.+ 23.03.22: Künstler*innenhaus Mousonturm Frankfurt / Main Infos

Text, performance, concept Hendrik Quast 

Costume, make-up Christina Neuss

Sound Toben Piel
Artistic collaboration, video Michel Wagenschütz

Stage Jonas Maria Droste

Light Maika Knoblich

Dramaturgy Florian Fischer

Text consulting Daniela Plügge

Transplantation Bahar Akcay, Dr. Christian Roessing

PR Yven Augustin

Technical direction Hendrik Borowski

Production assistance Maret Zeino-Mahmalat

Production management Lisa Gehring

A production by Hendrik Quast in co-production with Sophiensæle, Künstler*innenhaus Mousonturm Frankfurt/Main, Forum Freies Theater Düsseldorf, Kampnagel Hamburg and Theater RAMPE Stuttgart. Supported by the Senate Department for Culture and Social Cohesion of the State of Berlin and the Fonds Darstellende Künste with funds from the Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media. 

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