Tuesday, 21 May 2013


KATYA, SONYA, POLYA, GALYA, VERA, OLYA, TANYA...

The Meyerhold Centre & The School of Drama Art Theatre joint project.
Idea, composition direction — Dmitry Krimov
Set designer — Mariya Tregubova
Light designer — Damir Ismagilov.
Performed by:
A. Sinyakina, N. Gorchakova, M. Smolnikova, V. Nazarova, V. Garkalin, M. Maminov, M. Umanets, S Melkonyan, A. Kirichenko, V. Dubrovin, A. Cabantsev (accordion).


КАТЯ, СОНЯ, ПОЛЯ, ГАЛЯ, ВЕРА, ОЛЯ, ТАНЯ...

   Совместная постановка Центра им. Вс. Мейерхольда и театра "Школа драматического искусства".
В новой постановке режиссер Дмитрий Крымов обращается к циклу рассказов «Темные аллеи», а точнее, к череде воспоминаний – трагических, темных, постыдных и даже жестоких, но вместе с тем – щемяще-сладких. Упоительная грусть о минувшей любви – этим чувством наполнен весь сборник, написанный Буниным в преклонном возрасте, вдали от родины. Созданный по законам поэзии, спектакль пронизан этим настроением, но вместе с тем Дмитрий Крымов предлагает зрелый, лишенный ложной сентиментальности взгляд на хрестоматийное произведение. На сцене – семеро мужчин, похожих на актеров немого кино, папиросы, сюртуки и фраки, ностальгический декаданс под звуки вальса, - и пылкие барышни, замирающие покалеченными куклами в картонных коробках. Герои - как размноженная фотография начала ХХ века — собирательный образ бунинского персонажа, охваченного безумной и губительной страстью к женщине, которая неминуемо становится жертвой этого чувства.


Дмитрий Крымов: «У Бунина все рассказы «Темных аллей» кончаются плохо. Нет ни одного счастливого финала. Это рассказы чудовищны по своей трезвости, а, может быть, вымышленности - это каждый решает сам. Я не говорю, что я с ним согласен или не согласен. Но он поразителен, по своей философской безнадежности. А философ, художник - это человек, который понимает, с чего все начинается и чем все кончается. «Темные аллеи» - как раз подобное воспоминание о тягучем моменте, который при этом сладок».
Валерий Гаркалин: «Искусство театра начинается тогда, когда можно говорить о человеке не условным языком умозрительного исследования, а как о чем-то больном и нервном, где вскрывается сознание и материя, «рвется» человеческая ткань. Почему так жестоко? Потому что нужно убрать все клишированное, а это требует хирургического вмешательства. Я очень люблю, когда взгляд на вещи абсолютно не связан ни с каким стереотипом. Клишированное сознание — мертвое. Оно ничего не дает, кроме сухого и плоского ощущения от очень многоликого явления, каким является Бунин. Это удивительно — так раскрыть тему мужского и женского, с такой неожиданной стороны…»

Постановочная группа:
Идея, композиция и постановка — Дмитрий Крымов
Художник — Мария Трегубова
Художник по свету — Дамир Исмагилов.
В спектакле заняты:
А. Синякина, Н. Горчакова, М. Смольникова, В. Назарова, В. Гаркалин, М. Маминов, М. Уманец, С. Мелконян, А. Кириченко, В. Дубровин, А. Кабанцев (аккордеон).

Sunday, 19 May 2013

GIFT 2013 presents CULLBERG BALLET

High heels too (2013)
Choreography Benoît Lachambre
Music Hahn Rowe
Installation concept Laurent Goldring, made by Alexandra Bertaut and Laurent Goldring
Video Laurent Goldring
Costume design Alexandra

HIGH HEELS TOO

CANADIAN CHOREOGRAPHER BENOÎT LACHAMBRE CREATES A NEW PIECE FOR SIX OF THE CULLBERG BALLET DANCERS, WITH WORLD PREMIÈRE IN STOCKHOLM IN MARCH 2013. THE IDEA FOR THE NEW WORK CAME WHEN LACHAMBRE TOOK PART IN A CONTEMPORARY DANCE PROJECT AT ONE OF MONTRÉAL’S BURLESQUE CLUBS, AND CREATED A SOLO ON HIGH HEELS FOR A DANCER. IN THE NEW PIECE FOR CULLBERG BALLET; HIGH HEELS TOO, LACHAMBRE COLLABORATES WITH COSTUME DESIGNER ALEXANDRA BERTAUT, VISUAL ARTIST LAURENT GOLDRING, BOTH BASED IN PARIS, AND THE NEW YORK-BASED COMPOSER HAHN ROWE. 

“Crucial and truly outstanding is the music. If there is a story in High heels too, it is told by Hahn Rowe’s exquisite, sophisticated live-electronica, intimately influencing and being influenced by everything taking place on stage. Beginning with hardly audible crackles and glitches, continuing with repeating synthetical bird song and icing bows. Hahn Rowe creates a room within the room, deepening and reinforcing the totality. High heels is hardly a dance blockbuster, but one of the most poetic, thought provoking works I have ever seen with Cullberg Ballet.
Narrow, yet not difficult. Definitely sublime. Absolutely stunning.”
Örjan Abrahamsson, Dagens Nyheter, 3 March 2013

“High heels too is a perspective play with body, gender, room, tension and shifts between the artificial and the intuitive – also emphasized by Hahn Rowe’s subtle composition of sound and electronic beats. The piece moves from surface to interior with an accelarating pulse. With is sculptural qualities the piece could also be presented in an art context – the dancing doesn’t begin until the end. The movements are transmitted from the spine and outwards. That is the core of Lachambre’s body concious movement philosophy. The outwork helps us see; the visual and auditory totality captures the interest almost all the way. It could have been banal but is suggestive and beautiful.”
Anna Ångström, Svenska Dagbladet 3 March 2013

“High heels too is a poetic play with the interaction between the body and everything contributing to changing its original shape, or if preferred, a study in man’s obsession of changing identity.”
Lena Andrén, Nummer.se, 2 March 2013




















კანადელი ქორეოგაფი, მხატვარი, იმპროვიზატორი, პედაგოგი და მონრეალის Par B.L.eux თეატრის სამხატვრო ხელმძღვანელი ბენუა ლაშამბრე საერთაშორისო ცეკვის საზოგადოების გამორჩეული წევრია და უკვე ოცდაათი წელია რაც თავის გამორჩეულ ისტორიას ქმნის. 80-იანი წლებში, ნიუ იორკში, მან საქვეყნოდ გაითქვა სახელი როგორც ცეკვის ხელოვნების მკვლევარმა და იმპროვიზატორმა. 1990 წლებიდან კი მან საკუთარი ცოდნის და დაკვირვებების სწავლება დაიწყო და 1996 წელს საკუთარი თეატრი Par B.L.eux დაარსა. იგი თანამედროვე და ინტერდისციპლინარული (რამდენიმე ჟანრის, მიმართულების შერწყმა) ქორეოგრაფიული ნამუშევრებითაა გამორჩეული. მათ ახასიათებს ვიზუალური და საშემსრულებლო არტის განუყოფელი ხედვა. ხოლო ბენუა ლაშამბრეს გაბედულმა, ელექტროდარტყმასავით მგრძნობიარე, მეტაფორულმა წარმოდგენებმა ცეკვის ფილოსოფიის და თეორიის განვითარება განაპირობა. კანადის ხელოვნების სახელმწიფო საბჭომ გამორჩეული წვლილისთვის ცეკვის ხელოვნებაში მას ეროვნული პრემია გადასცა და კანადური თეატრის პიონერისა და მედროშის დორა მავორ მურის ჯილდო.

Saturday, 18 May 2013

GIFT 2013 presents CULLBERG BALLET
High heels too (2013)
Choreography Benoît Lachambre
Music Hahn Rowe
Installation concept Laurent Goldring, made by Alexandra Bertaut and Laurent Goldring
Video Laurent Goldring 
Costume design Alexandra

Cullberg Ballet is in its fifth decade as a leading company on the front line of modern dance. The ensemble has performed in more than forty countries and is an important cultural ambassador for Sweden. Cullberg Ballet's extensive international tours give foreign audiences a taste of Swedish culture at its best. 

Over the past ten years Cullberg Ballet has performed as many times abroad as in Sweden, scoring popular successes in Europe, Asia, Australia and the Americas. In Sweden, the company's widespread performances bring the best of Swedish dance to the national audiences. Cullberg Ballet's dancers are the company's greatest assets. The composition of the company's dancers has been international from the start and many nationalities are represented also in today's Cullberg Ballet. The dancers' technical proficiency and strong stage personalities have always been Cullberg Ballet's main characteristics. Cullberg Ballet belongs to Riksteatern, Sweden's National Touring Theatre.

Since 1950, when her Miss Julie had its première, Birgit Cullberg has exerted strong influence over contemporary Swedish and foreign ballet. Over the years, Miss Julie has become one of the world's most widely danced works. During the 1960s, with her personal, passionate and often humorous style, Birgit Cullberg made an extensive career for herself outside Sweden. In 1967 she founded the present Cullberg Ballet under the head organisation Riksteatern, with eight handpicked international dancers, of who three were Swedes. 

In the 1970s Mats Ek entered the dance world and created, for the Cullberg Ballet, such powerful and socially committed works as Soweto and Bernarda. In the following decade, he concentrated on pioneering new versions of the old classics Giselle and Swan Lake. During the 1990s, Mats Ek's creations have included the Emmy awarded Carmen for the Cullberg Ballet. Birgit Cullberg (1967-85) and Mats Ek (1982-93) were the artistic directors of the Cullberg Ballet for a total of 26 years. With their outstanding works, they have set their personal stamp on the company, making it one of the world's foremost ensembles. When Mats Ek stepped down as artistic director of the Cullberg Ballet in 1993, Carolyn Carlson, who created the full-evening performance Sub Rosa for the ensemble, took over the position for a two-year period. 

On July 1, 2003, the Swedish choreographer Johan Inger took over the artistic management of the Cullberg Ballet. Johan Inger was born in Stockholm and educated at the Royal Swedish Ballet School and at the National Ballet School in Canada. In 1985 he started as a dancer at the Royal Swedish Ballet, where he in 1989 became a soloist. In 1990 he became a member of the Nederlands Dans Theater (NDT) in Holland. 

Johan Inger's official breakthrough as a choreographer came in the autumn 1995 with a ballet for NDT2, for which he was awarded the Philip Morris′ Finest Selection. Since the breakthrough, Johan Inger regularly created new choreographies for NDT. For Walking Mad he received the Lucas Hoving award - the Dutch theatres' award for best production in 2001. 



As Artistic Director of the Cullberg Ballet Johan Inger built up a new repertory based on ballets by him and guest choreographers of his choice.In the summer of 2008 Johan Inger left the artistic directorship of Cullberg Ballet to continue as a freelance choreographer. Ensemble manager Anna Grip is appointed artistic director. Anna Grip joined Cullberg Ballet as ensemble manager in December 2006, and she was appointed acting artistic director since the Spring of 2008. She trained as a dancer at Balettakademien in Stockholm and continued her studies in N.Y. She has worked as a répétiteur and teacher at a number of dance companies and educational institutions, including the contemporary dance companies CCAP in Stockholm, Rosas in Brussels and Nye Carte Blanche in Bergen and at Helsinki City Theatre.

Friday, 17 May 2013



Omicron 2, a company for the arts- Stavros Tsakiris
FARM
By Stavros S. Tsakiris

This planet is a farm.
Keeping the canvas of the myth of "Animal Farm" through small scenes and the constant presence of music, four ordinary people "tell" a modern story. And between the closest people, tied by common dreams and aspirations, lurks the inevitable (?) rift of personal enforcement. While there are laws 'designed' by people, no justice will be among us. We will go against our natural destination.

Stavros Tsakiris, on the occasion of G. Orwell's novels "Animal Farm" and "1984" detects the limits and methods of totalitarianism and how they are expressed in today's societies. Within an empty space with a few objects the four actors-performers “narrate” once again the story of Orwell and experience along with their viewers the gap opened by the millenary culture amongst people but also removed the human race from universe. The human culture of everyday life is an illusion that leads us to a dead end. Confidence in "machines" and our separation from other animals is a monstrous misunderstanding.

People and animals alive and shadows, spectators and actors, dreams and reality, hope and guilt are the elements of a carefree nightmare.

An unorthodox performance of what "theater" and "theater enjoyment" mean. The century of personal problems and concerns has finished.


Direction- Text:  Stavros S. Tsakiris
Music: Minos Matsas
Sets- Flash animation: Alexandros Psychoulis
Costumes- Masks: Giannis Metzikof
Dramaturgy: Dimitra Petropoulou
Movement: Apostolia Papadamaki
Lighting: Katerina Maragoudaki
Performing: Omicron 2

Thursday, 16 May 2013


GIFT 2013 presents
Rêve d’Herbert
La Compagnie des Quidams, France
ABANOTUBANI, TBILISI
15 October 22:00 

Mysterious characters will invite festival-goers to join them on a fantastical adventure in old Tbilisi through the moonlit  for the show Rêve d’Herbert (Herbert’s Dream) which is being brought to the GIFT Festival 2013 by French performance group Compagnie des Quidams.

The enchanting show will see the performers themselves magically turn into giant lanterns that light the way to a grand finale full of music, movement and majesty.  It promises to be really fascinating to have one of the city’s most historic settings as the backdrop for the performance.

La Compagnie des Quidams present the a fascinating story about  shadows, long white figures, on stilts, being draped by clothes, who seem to wait for any meeting. Appearing in the course of a tree, at the corner of a street, provided with the only language of silences and slow gestures ; they begin strange secret meetings, they approach, withdraw and finally invite us to follow them...  Step by step, the five characters are transformed into voluminous 4m height characters. Deformed and majestuous at the same time, clumsy and ethereal, as come from another planet, their heads light up.  Then the enormous silhouettes take us off around a luminous star.  To a strange and bewitching music, the five characters make a magic rite which make the star rising up in the sky...  As a wick at the moon...  As in a dream

“Compagnie des Quidams have done their show in all sorts of amazing places across Europe and around the world.

The free performances of Rêve d’Herbert are in Old Tbilisi, Abanotubani on Tuesday, October 15 at 22.00. People are advised to arrive early for the show. The performance lasts about 50 minutes.

Irina Brook

THE ISLAND TRILOGY

Three stories about revenge, forgiveness, love and freedom

a project adapted and directed by Irina Brook

AN ODYSSEY after Homer
THE TEMPEST! by William Shakespeare
THE ISLAND OF SLAVES by Pierre Marivaux (new production)

performed by, in alphabetical order and characters The Island of Slaves
Iphicrate Hovnatan Avedikian
Arlequin Jeremias Nussbaum
Trivelin Augustin Ruhabura
Euphrosine Isabelle Townsend
Cléanthis Ysmahane Yaquini
performed by, in alphabetical order and characters The Tempest!
Caliban Hovnatan Avedikian
Prospero, Stefano Renato Giuliani
Ariel Scott Koehler
Ferdinand, Trinculo Jeremias Nussbaum
Miranda Ysmahane Yaquini
performed by, in alphabetical order and characters An Odyssey
Professor, Tiresia, Marine, several roles Renato Giuliani
Marine, Poseidone, Hermes, several roles Scott Koehler
Ulysses, Telemachus Jeremias Nussbaum
Penelope, Poliphemus, Circe, Lotofaga Ysmahane Yaquini
assistant director Geoffrey Carey
set design Noëlle Ginefri-Corbel
sound design Samuel Serandour
lighting design Thibault Ducros
stage manager / props master Philippe Jasko
production assistant Angelo Nonelli
coproduction CRT Artificio Milano, Dreamtheatre Parigi
in collaboration with Spoleto56 Festival of 2Worlds

in French with Italian subtitles

www.irinasdreamtheatre.com


Irina´sDreamTheatre invites you to join us as we travel from island to island on an action-packed quest, a journey of self-discovery.  Each island draws us into a different world and atmosphere, but beyond appearances, beyond the sand, the sea and the blue skies, we find that in each of the microcosms we are confronted by profound questions about our humanity, our emotions and our behaviour. We follow Ulysses on his mythical adventures as he tries to find his way home; on the way, we see him escape the intoxicating lure of the Lotus-eaters, outwit the blood-thirsty Cyclop, resist the call of the sirens, and almost succumb to charms of the sorceress Circe, before reaching his beloved family in Ithaca. This is a journey of wits, of challenges, of passions and of the senses. At the end there is no pity for Penelope´s suitors; no forgiveness. Only revenge.

Next, we find ourselves shipwrecked on Prospero´s Island: this is a seemingly enchanted place, full of music and magic. But there is a darker side to what we first perceive, as this island is controlled by a powerful tyrant: the esoteric magician-chef Prospero. Its sole inhabitants are his daughter, Miranda, the monster, Caliban, and a spirit of the island, Ariel, young people who all, in their own different ways, share one and the same dream: to escape Prospero´s patriarchal domination to gain independence and freedom. This island provides a deeper question into the heart of man: how do we allow those we love to be free, to be themselves; how do we use or abuse our power over others? And ultimately, can we forgive and let go?

Finally, we have a crash-landing on the Island of Slaves. This is a clearly an utopian island, ruled by idealised values of justice and equal rights, inspired by the thinking and writings of the Age of Enlightenment. This is a place where social experiment is deemed necessary for the common good. Here we find a mysterious « ruler », Trivelin. An ex-slave who has made it his life-search to study people´s behaviour: when masters and slaves land on his island, he tests them by reversing their roles in society, with the ultimate hope that this exercise will « cure » them from selfishness. On this island, we can dream of a world where kindness, generosity, compassion and forgiveness count above anything else.


IRINA BROOK

Daughter of director Peter Brook and actress Natasha Parry, Irina Brook is a child of the theatre. Born in Paris, she spent grew up between England and France. At eighteen, she went to New York to study acting with Stella Adler and began acting Off- off -Broadway. Back in Paris, she performed in The Cherry Orchard under her father´s direction at the Bouffes Du Nord. She then moved to London and acted in film, television and numerous theatre productions. She directed her first production A Beast On The Moon by Richard Kalinoski, in London in 1996. She realized immediately that her real vocation was directing, not acting. This was followed by Madame Klein and All´s Well That Ends Well. In 1998 she created the French version of A Beast On The Moon at the Theatre de Vidy -Lausanne, then at MC93-Bobigny and finally , after an international tour, at the Theatre de l´Oeuvre in Paris. She received five Moliere awards (including best direction and best show). She also directed the television version, for which she received the Prix Mitrani. She was then invited by Ariane Mnouchkine to work with the troupe of the Theatre du Soleil. They restaged a french version of All´s Well That Ends Well at the Avignon Festival. In 2000, she staged Katherine Burger´s Resonance at the Theatre de l´Atelier, and received another Moliere award and the SACD prize Nouvel Espoir ( Best Newcomer). She created a one hour version of Homer´s Odyssey for the Festival of Sartrouville.( for young audiences). After this came Juliette and Romeo at Vidy - Lausanne and the Théâtre National de Chaillot in 2002; Bernard Friel´s Dancing at Lughnasa for Vidy and Bobigny , which also was invited to play in Tokyo. She directed Tennessee Williams´s The Glass Menagerie at the Theatre de l'Atelier, Brecht´sThe Good Person Of Schezuan at Lausanne and Chaillot, which then toured for a year. Next came Thornton Wilder's The Bridge at San Luis Rey at the Théâtre Vidy-Lausanne and the Théâtre de Sceaux , and The Island of Slaves by Marivaux at the Théâtre de l´Atelier. In 2006, Irina was asked to recreate her The Glass Menagerie with Japanese actors at the New National theater of Tokyo.

She created En Attendant le Songe (Waiting For The Dream) in 2005, her version of A Midsummer´s Night´s Dream for six men, first produced by the Dedans-Dehors Brétigny Festival and then the Villeneuve les Avignon before a French and European tour and a month at the Bouffes du Nord (December 2007). The production has played over 300 times in France and all over the world, including in Canada and New York. She then put together her own company, in association with Olivier Peyronnaud and the MCNN ( Nevers): La Compagnie Irina Brook and they created Somewhere… a Mancha, inspired by Don Quichotte, for Villeneuve-les-Avignon in July 2008, and then in Paris and on tour. Her first opera was The Magic Flutewhich she co-directed with Dan Jemmett, for the Dutch Reisopera, (conductor Ton Koopman.). Next came Eugene Onegin at Aix-en-Provence followed by La Cenerentola at the Théâtre des Champs-Elysées, the Teatro Comunale of Bologna and the Royal Opera House in Stockholm. She also directed La Traviata in Bologna and Lille. And Haendel´s Giulio Cesare at the Théâtre des Champs-Elysées. In 2007, the Teatro Real of Madrid invited her to direct Il Burbero di Buon Cuore by Martin y Soler. This was revived in 2011 in Barcelona. Since 2009, her company has been touring all their productions: An Odyssey, En Attendant le Songe, and Somewhere la Mancha. The company created Tempete!, taken from Shakespeare'sTempest. Irina put together a new show in 2010 in NY at La Mama:La Vie Materielle, with texts by Marguerite Duras and VirginiaWoolf and live original music by Sadie Jemmett. In 2011 she created Pan, her version Barrie's Peter Pan, at the Theatre de Paris. In July 2012 she was invited to Salzburg Festival to create Ibsen´s Peer Gynt for the Salzburg Festival, and also to show her company´sTempest!. This year she has re-imagined her company under the new name of IRINA´S DREAMTHEATRE, in collaboration with Parisian producer and literary agent, Marie Cecile Renauld and Marie-Astrid Perimony. She recreated La Vie Materielle this January 2013 in France with the MCNN, for a small tour. After her partecipation to Spoleto56 Festival of 2Worlds with The Island Trilogy, next April 2014, she will direct Donizetti´s L´Elisir D´Amorefor the Berlin Deutschesopera and Don Pasquale at the Vienna Opera in April 2015. In 2002, Irina Brook was named Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres by the French Minister of Culture.

Wednesday, 15 May 2013



Temptête!
Irina Brook, Stage Director
Noëlle Ginefri, Stage Design
Sylvie Martin-Hyszka, Nathalie Saulnier,
 Costume Design
Arnaud Jung,
 Lighting Design

CAST

Rustaveli Theatre, Tbilisi. GEorgoa
18, 19 October 18:00


Irina Brook’s nationality is the theatre. An artist who is equally at home in theatres on both sides of the Atlantic, who has directed at the Théâtre du Soleil and the Avignon Festival and won France’s most distinguished directing award, the Prix Molière, yet whose first language is English, she finds moving between languages, cultures and theatrical forms as natural as breathing.
 
She was born into a theatre family. This in itself is not ­particularly unusual for successful theatremakers, but the theatre family Irina Brook was born into (she is the daughter of director Peter Brook and actress Natasha Parry) is rather special and highly cosmopolitan. Irina Brook’s approach to her father’s legacy is refreshingly uncomplicated. She has had no inhibitions about tackling the same plays as her father and on those occasions when she has done so – such as A Midsummer Night’s Dream or The Tempest – the results have been strikingly different.

Irina Brook will create a new English language production of Peer Gynt specially for the Salzburg Festival with a typically international ensemble from a diverse range of performance backgrounds.

In order to offer a broader perspective on the work of Irina Brook and the remarkable skills of some of her actors, we will also be presenting visiting performances of her production of La Tempête. This is a richly comic version of Shakespeare’s last great play, recasting Prospero as a magician in the kitchen, the owner of an Italian restaurant. Performed in French by a cast of just five actors, it uses circus skills, slapstick and clowning to create a fresh and lively interpretation of this moving story of a father and daughter, of magic, the power of the elements and of revenge. The evening is a magnificent display of physical acting and virtuoso timing.

David Tushingham