

Irene Escolar

Pablo Messiez
Irene Escolar stars in Personas, Lugares y Cosas (People, Places, and Things), a play by Duncan MacMillan, directed by Pablo Messiez.
It will be on display in the Main Hall of the Teatro Español from November 25, 2025, to January 11, 2026.
Tickets now on sale.
ABOUT THE WORK

In People, Places, and Things, Duncan Macmillan follows Emma's days in rehab alongside a group of patients with substance abuse issues.
She is an actress and arrives at the Center after apparently hitting rock bottom. In the first stage direction of the play, the author tells us: “We see what she sees,” thus allowing the scenes to be affected by the perception of a woman under the influence, while also telling us that she is also, at least for a while, us.
In the same initial note, he continues: “When the scene changes around her, Emma is aware of what is happening.”
And it is at the end of this sentence that the ideological stance of the work becomes apparent.
Emma—we—are aware of what is happening. The body always knows what is happening. The problem is that we often find it difficult to listen to it.
Far from proposing a world divided into addicts and non-addicts, or thinking of problematic consumption as something close to fatality, Emma can recognize herself as responsible. Knowing that from her position of privilege she is choosing—as in theater—to do what she does and give her life to it. Even if it is difficult to accept hurting oneself as a choice of one's own body.
It is the recognition of this complexity that allows you to see your desire and understand that if you have to choose, it is better to choose that which brings more joy than sadness. More life than death. That which increases your power to act. In short, choose to act. Say: I am here, this is my life. And take charge.
Because Emma knows that life is as real—or as unreal—as theater. That it's about agreements we accept and, therefore, can change.
But this is not a moralizing didactic drama. If anything, it is an ethical exploration of how we manage pain and pleasure. All the arguments, as if it were a Greek tragedy, are convincingly solid. Also, as in tragedies, there are characters and a chorus, and a constant, irresolvable tension between the Apollonian and the Dionysian. Between the logic of reason and the mysteries of the body.
People, Places, and Things does not seek to pontificate on any issue (the play ends with a “Why” hanging in the air) but rather to portray—with lucidity, humor, and affection—the complexity, absurdity, and wonder of being alive.
Pablo Messiez/July 2025
SYNOPSIS
Emma is an actress. She is on stage playing the lead role in “The Seagull.” She is heavily drugged. “I should be killed,” she says. Because that's what the script says, but also because she believes it. And moments later, she collapses. Emma, Nina, and everything else.
That's where your journey to recovery will begin. That's where People, Places, and Things begins.
The days spent at the detox clinic alongside the group of professionals and patients will be the setting in which Duncan Macmillan unfolds this journey into the heart of trauma, in search of healing.
How can I be back here again, after wanting so badly to leave?
In the play, there are no certainties, but there is sustained action: that of listening. Listening to others, stopping looking at yourself for a while. And thus, seeing yourself better. Knowing that you are part of a group that knows both pleasure and suffering. “I am here. You are here. We are here,” says Emma. And some of the pain is eased by knowing that you are close.


