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HENRY RODRIGUEZ

HENRY RODRIGUEZ

Pulling Scales

Italian premiere

PERFORMANCE

Sunday June 7 | 7 pm

Teatro della Tosse
Sala Campana

Tickets

You can access this event with the following tickets:

  • June Pass → buy here 

  • June 7 Ticket → available on DICE from April 8

  • Single Event Ticket → only available at the door


Henry Rodríguez

Henry Rodríguez (1991) is an interdisciplinary artist, dance educator, choreographer, performer and music maker born in Cuba and based in the Netherlands. As a dancer, he has collaborated with companies and choreographers such as Ballet Español de Cuba, Rosario Cárdenas, Danza Contemporánea de Cuba, Pepe Hevia Danza, Julio Cesar Iglesias Ungo, George Cespedes, Theo Clinkard and Faizah Grootens.


In 2022 he founded GOYES’KA, an emerging project-based dance and physical theatre company through which he develops his choreographic and musical research. His works have been presented at European and international festivals, including Florence Dance Festival and Amsterdam Fringe Festival, where he received an award as a winning choreographer.


Pulling Scales

At Electropark 2026 he presents, as an Italian premiere, Pulling Scales, produced with GOYES’KA. Winner of the 2025 Fringe at Best Award at the Amsterdam Fringe Festival, the performance stages an undefined figure: a lizard, a caiman, a dog, or perhaps simply a human being, green, sensual and restless, driven by a deep desire for change.



The work reflects on transformation and awakening, both individual and collective, starting from the Cuban reality. For a long time, people in Cuba have been trapped in a harsh and endless cycle, crushed by opposing ideologies, between distorted communism and far-right radical beliefs. This condition takes shape on stage as a body in constant metamorphosis, marked by tension, resistance and the need for change.


Created in collaboration with Elle (Lea Katrin, costumes) and L’DELTA (Henry Rodríguez, music production), the performance is part of the series Physical Rootlessness.


Please note

The performance lasts 30 minutes. Please note that it includes intense music and sound, soft strobe lights, and the depiction of sexual violence.




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