South African director Brett Bailey, who has been travelling with Exhibit B for four years with little trouble, told AFP recently the sudden anger over the installation was a grave misunderstanding from people who had not actually seen the "deeply emotional" work.
"Protesters at the premiere of Exhibit B in St Denis, Paris, smashed through the theatre doors tonight. Set off fire alarms. Trying to stop us," he wrote on his Facebook page last night.
The director of the Gerard Philippe de Saint-Denis theatre Jean Bellorini said only two performances could take place before the protest put an end to the evening's shows.
Every 20 minutes a small group of spectators enters the location where one by one they stand in front of the jarring living portraits.
"As they move through the exhibit, we watch them and witness anger, grief, pity, sadness, compassion. Above all, we witness a dawning of awareness. This is why we keep doing this, and would keep on doing it, if we could," the performers said in a statement defending the show earlier this year.
Europeans and Americans once flocked to these exhibits in which Africans such as pygmy Ota Benga posed in native dress.
One of Exhibit B's 12 displays show the plight of a Herero woman from Namibia forced to boil the decapitated heads of fellow prisoners and scrape them clean with shards of glass for German so-called scientific experiments.
Bailey also touches on atrocities committed by colonial forces in the Belgian and French Congos, the plight of African immigrants in Europe, and the horrors of Apartheid.
"There were objections to the fact that a white South African is telling a story about racism," Bailey told AFP.
The exhibition toured Europe in 2013 and received a "beautiful response" he added.
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