Title | File type | Publiseringsdato | Download |
---|---|---|---|
Program for The Theatre of Cruelty's production Amazonas (2011) | October 21, 2011 | Download |
Amazonas
Amazonas (2011) was a theatre production by The Theatre of Cruelty in collaboration with Festival Eurodramafest, based on a script by Michał Walczak.
Lars Øyno directed it.
Information
(Objekt ID 23993)Object type | Production |
Premiere | October 21, 2011 |
Produced by | The Theatre of Cruelty |
In collaboration with | Festival Eurodramafest |
Based on | Amazonas by Michał Walczak |
Audience | Adults, Youth |
Language | Norwegian |
Keywords | Theatre, Physical theatre |
Running period | October 15, 2011 — March 29, 2013 |
Website | Grusomhetens Teater |
Requirements to venue
Blackout | Yes |
At the webpage of The Theatre of Cruelty one can read the following director's notes by Lars Øyno, director of Amazonas:
"Antonin Artaud wanted to create a theatre that could have a preventive effect on human created disasters. He had to seek out the indigenous Tarahumaran people in Mexico to find what he was looking for; an organic language based on ritual practices, a performative expression that completely opposed Western perceptions of the concept of performing arts. The purpose of this was healing, for himself and for the Western man.'In the darkness there is a sun', he writes somewhere,'a black light'.
A similar vision manifested itself in Poland in the 60es under the leadership of Jerzy Grotowski. Today we must note that the Western theatre is characterized by commercialization, whose main purpose is to increase material status and fame. Culture is reduced to passive idolatry, where life is avoided or kept at a distance. Artaud called upon a culture that could give us the possibility to obtain the forces of life itself, and in this context, he saw theatre as a protest against the narrowing of the idea of culture in the West; art should contain a social anarchy.
Michal Walczak's Amazonas aims to illuminate a conflict similar to this. A young person attending an audition assumes a serious situation where her enthusiasm will be taken seriously. Unfortunately, it does not always turn out that way. In a theatre community you can quickly lose your idealism, and become used by the system to serve the passivity of the people. Theatre communities such as these can act as copies of business and capitalism; one confirms the system and receives one’s pay. All that which is known, what one sees and what is, gets attention. Nothing is given to that which does not exist, or is obscure and indistinct. Realizations of chaos and darkness might be the rescue. It is in facing the metaphysical that humans can understand their condition and can act with decency. The natural world we seek to preserve expects a different kind of presence from us, where we’re allowed to take a pause.
The Amazon is chaos, but based upon an absolute order. Man must listen to nature, then it is a friend. The rain forest is the lung, the respiratory organ, the anarchy that keep us alive on earth. A new direction for theatre must follow this thought. I feel that Krzysztof Komeda's Po Katastrofie fits into this frame. Catastrophe occurs in the moment when man raises himself up above the organic, pushes life aside and tears to pieces the most fragile of sensory and respiratory organs. When the Amazon has vanished, the cataclysm is a fact. Afterwards only a massive grave remains - a death accompanied by the fanfares of trumpets - the Apocalypse.
To me Poland has always been a cultural nation. A number of innovative artists have inspired us in Western Europe through film, theatre, music and visual art. Polish poster art and jazz music has been especially close to my heart. After the wall fell, the western expansion into Poland has certainly led to a more commercial situation. Whether one is about to lose traditions or not, I do not know, but the situation in Poland is not that different from that of young people in Norway; we are constantly being bombarded by the assaults of commercialism.
Lars Øyno, Theatre of Cruelty, Oslo, Norway September 2011"
Amazonas by The Theatre of Cruelty was supported by Eurodramafest, the municipality of Oslo and The Ministry of Foreign Affairs (travel grant/performing arts).
SOURCES:
The Theatre of Cruelty, grusomhetensteater.no, 16.03.2012, http://www.grusomhetensteater.no/
The Theatre of Cruelty, grusomhetensteater.no, 16.03.2012, http://www.grusomhetensteater.no/2011/12/amazonas-2011/
The National Library of Norway, digitised performance program transferred to Sceneweb 13.08.2015
Name | Role |
---|---|
Michał Walczak | – Author |
Lars Øyno | – Concept/Idea |
Lars Øyno | – Direction |
Tormod Lindgren | – Stage design |
Gjøril Bjercke Sæther | – Costume |
Jan Skomakerstuen | – Lighting design |
Lars Brunborg | – Actor |
Hanne Dieserud | – Actor |
Per Bogstad Gulliksen | – Actor |
Odille Heftye Blehr | – Actor |
Jimmie Jonasson | – Actor |
Camilla Vislie | – Actor |
Vera Krohn Svaleng | – Performer |
Trude Sneve | – Mask design |
Vera Krohn Svaleng | – Director’s assistant |
Jannicke Lie | – Assistant Stage Designer |
Trine Torgerstuen | – Costume assistant |
Thomas Sanne | – Technician |
Morten Bruun | – Producer |
Festival Eurodramafest | October 15, 2011 |