Title (10) | File type | Publiseringsdato | Download |
---|---|---|---|
Annual program from The Norwegian Theatre in the spring and autumn of 2016. | January 2016 | Download | |
Season program from The Norwegian Theatre in autumn 2013. | January 2013 | Download | |
Season program from The Norwegian Theatre in mai-autumn of the 2015. | April 2015 | Download | |
Season program from The Norwegian Theatre in spring 2016 | 2016 | Download | |
Season program from The Norwegian Theatre in the spring of 2013. | January 2013 | Download | |
Season program from The Norwegian Theatre spring 2016. | January 2016 | Download | |
Season program from Trøndelag Theater spring and autumn 2014. | January 2014 | Download | |
Sesongprogram fra Beaivváš Sámi Našunálateáhter 2019. | January 2019 | Download | |
Sesongprogram fra Det Norske Teatret mars-mai 2014. | February 2014 | Download | |
Sesongprogram fra Det Norske Teatret mars-mai 2015. | February 2015 | Download |
Abraham's Children
Abraham's Children (2011) was a theatre production by The Norwegian Theatre. The production was a world premiere, revolving around the differences and similarities between Islam, Judaism and Christianity. It used historical and religious texts, compiled and interwoven by Svein Tindberg. The production was performed at the theatre's main stage.
Kjetil Bang-Hansen directed it.
Svein Tindberg performed the monologue.
Abraham's Children won The Hedda Award 2012 in the production of the year category.
The production toured Norway with The Norwegian Touring Theatre the autumn of 2012 and the spring of 2013. Visiting performances at The National Stage and Rogaland Theatre also took place in the autumn of 2012. It has later been performed as a visiting performance at other theatres, in Norway and abroad.
A digital version of Abraham's Children was released by The Norwegian Theatre during the Corona crisis of 2020. You may read more about that here.
Information
(Objekt ID 28593)Object type | Production |
Premiere | September 9, 2011 |
Produced by | The Norwegian Theatre |
In collaboration with | The Norwegian Touring Theatre (Riksteatret) |
Based on | Abraham's Children by Svein Tindberg |
Audience | Adults |
Language | Norwegian Nynorsk |
Keywords | Theatre, Monologue |
Running period | September 9, 2011 |
Duration | 2 hours, 30 minutes |
Website | Det Norske Teatret, TRØNDELAG TEATER |
"The coexistence between Abraham's children has been filled with conflict. But the story about Jews, Christians and Muslims is much more. It is also the story of a fruitful cultural, intellectual and spiritual exchange, in which the three religions have grown richer due to close cohabitation.
Over the past 30 years, Tindberg has worked on theatrical plays with religious themes. In Abraham's Children, he promotes the values embracing and uniting the three world religions: Judaism, Islam and Christianity. The Norwegian Theatre thinks there is still time to get together in the interest for cultural conflicts, parallels, long lines of thinking and an introduction to religions we may not have known had that much in common. Svein Tindberg's art of storytelling has given more than 90 000 the joy of finding community in a world where polarisation between religions keeps growing stronger.
Three religions - one book
In contemporary Europe, and The Middle East, Jews, Christians and Muslims live close to one another. The Muslim presence in Western Europe is relatively new. But Judaism and Islam have both been an integrated part of the otherwise Christian Europe for a long time. In Spain, at The Balkans and in parts of Eastern Europe, Islam has been dominating at times, and Jews and Christians have lived as minorities. In recent times, the situation has mostly been the opposite. Today, an increasing number of Muslims lives as minorities in Europe, a continent fundamentally formed by the Christian cultural heritage, and where a majority identifies as Christian."
The Hedda Jury gave the following reason for the award to Abraham's Children:
"The production of the year is unique in its genre. It holds high artistic quality, while insightfully, objectively illuminates a political discussion that suddenly became red-hot after the event turning Norway upside-down July 22 last year. Despite its serious theme, the production switches liberatingly between the sombre and humour, and it manages to entertain its audience while provoking reflection. The production is a pedagogic, thought-provoking presentation of the very foundation of our Christian culture. Written and performed by Svein Tindberg, who alone onstage maintains the very magic of theatre, and for more than two hours leads involving, immediate communication with the audience.
The production of the year is Abraham's Children at The Norwegian Theatre."
SOURCES:
The National Sami Theatre Beaivváš, beaivvas.no, 20.03.2019, https://beaivvas.no/nb/abrahams-barn/
The Norwegian Theatre, detnorsketeatret.no, 11.05.2020, https://www.detnorsketeatret.no/framsyningar/abrahamsbarn
The Hedda Award, 29.05.2012, http://heddaprisen.no/pub/heddaprisen/main/?&mid=1031&aid=1030
The Norwegian Touring Theatre, press release 11.06.2012
*Not yet translated into English. The title within parentheses is the Norwegian title's literal meaning.
Name | Role |
---|---|
Kjetil Bang-Hansen | – Adapted by |
Ola E. Bø | – Translation |
Svein Tindberg | – Concept/Idea |
Kjetil Bang-Hansen | – Direction |
Ola E. Bø | – Dramaturge |
John Kristian Alsaker | – Stage design |
Raymond Stubberud | – Video/Film |
Christopher Woxholtt | – Sound |
Ola Bråten | – Lighting design |
Svein Tindberg | – Actor |
Marit Framstad | – Mask design |
Helge Fykse | – Props |
Per Berg-Nilsen | – Stage manager |
Erlend Stamnes | – Stage manager |
Dag Jenssen | – Photo |
Stene Evensen | – Stage Manager |
Sissel Lillo Stenberg | – Prompter |
April 21, 2019 18:00 – Kautokeino Kulturhus | visiting performance |
January 14, 2014 – Hovedscenen, Trøndelag Teater, Trøndelag Theatre | Season premiere/Seasonal opening |
September 9, 2011 – Hovudscenen, The Norwegian Theatre | Worldwide premiere |
Writer and date unknown, Vårt Land [Oslo]:
"Informative, alive and deeply significant"
Writer and date unknown, Klassekampen [Oslo]:
"... unites an important political message and high-quality performing arts."