All audiences, adults and children aged 14 and over
Running time 1h15
In this story, Lilian Derruau links his experiences as a "working-class kid" to the ideas of sociologist Pierre Bourdieu. Not content with recounting the memories of his early childhood, he depicts the working-class France of the 70s in a text where truculence and self-mockery go hand in hand. Long a singer with a funny streak under the name of Wally, we find him here in a whole new register: sociological narrative, but in his own way, one that elicits laughter with a touch of poetry and a heap of emotion. A time of recklessness, then the realization of a form of social predestination from which it's hard to escape.
Always touching, Wally tells us. With humor and self-mockery. With tenderness. With modesty. Always with a smile in the corner of his eye.
Running time 1h15
In this story, Lilian Derruau links his experiences as a "working-class kid" to the ideas of sociologist Pierre Bourdieu. Not content with recounting the memories of his early childhood, he depicts the working-class France of the 70s in a text where truculence and self-mockery go hand in hand. Long a singer with a funny streak under the name of Wally, we find him here in a whole new register: sociological narrative, but in his own way, one that elicits laughter with a touch of poetry and a heap of emotion. A time of recklessness, then the realization of a form of social predestination from which it's hard to escape.
Always touching, Wally tells us. With humor and self-mockery. With tenderness. With modesty. Always with a smile in the corner of his eye.