Showing posts with label arts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label arts. Show all posts

Thursday, March 26, 2015

"Cultures collide in virtual space" with IAN ROWLANDS (Wales, UK)

What do you hope to gain from this project?
Inspiration as different genres / cultures collide in virtual space.

Who is your greatest writing influence?
My influences are outside the theatre. At 13, it was Jack Kerouac, in my thirties it was Umberto Eco then Baudrillard. Increasingly, Peter Sloterdijk, having been introduced to him by a Dutch colleague, Jeroen van den Berg, with whom I’m collaborating upon a production, Fragments of Journeys Towards the Horizon, to be staged internationally in 2016

Describe your writing room / process.
As I wrote, in an essay inspired by a comment once made by Amanda [Feldman, Lead Coordinator of The Around-the-Globe Chain Play] (and included in Historia, NoPassport Press, NY - a collection of plays I wrote whilst in NY).

‘The house in which I write these few notes is built upon a Roman wall on land once owned by a pre-Reformation monastery. I exist in a palimpsest of history. In the main, most Europeans do. In Europe it appears that there is no ‘No-space’. Here, no single thing is ‘virgin’. For no single thing is free of historic association; layered history is lived as life in the Old World.’ The room is a small back room; a book lined bubble (see Sloterdijk)

My process is haphazard / shards of time snatched in between the school run and the quotidian demands of life

How old or young are you?
Too old, but blessed by my children’s youth and surprised by my eternal anger at injustice, which drives my need to keep dreaming of Utopia for my children.


NATALIA ANTONOVA (Russia)-- "My life is eternally split between at least three countries"

Who is your greatest writing influence?

It's hard to say. I think others are always more qualified to make such an assessment. A critic friend once compared my work to the work of Russian screenwriter Alexander Mindadze. 

What makes a great play in your country?

I don't know if there is such a thing as "my country," per se, since my life is eternally split between at least three countries. If we're talking Russia - then that's really hard to say. Are we talking about modern plays, the classics, the popular foreign plays that have found a home in local theaters? Considering the conservative backlash currently going on in Russia, I'd say a great play is a play that gets people talking.

Describe your writing room / process.

I don't have a writing room, I write wherever and whenever. That's what happens when you're always busy/have a small child. I probably get my best ideas in the shower/when I'm walking somewhere, listening to music. I usually make notes on my phone, to look up later.

How do you wake up?

Usually, my kid wakes me up by demanding something or other, as kids do. 

Friday, March 20, 2015

"All is not what it seems" with playwright, JC NIALA (Kenya)

How were you contacted to participate?
I was contacted to contribute through The Theatre Company in Nairobi, Kenya.

Who is your greatest writing influence?
My greatest writing influences are the magical realists who thankfully remind us all is not what it seems. 

What makes a great play in your country?
In Kenya, the populist plays make people laugh and the profound plays make people think. Both types of plays are considered great if they speak to the essence of how Kenyans see themselves.

How do you wake up?
I wake up at 4am full of excitement and anticipation to get to my writing desk and the to watch the sunrise. 



JC Niala (Kenya) is an award-winning playwright whose plays have been performed and aired on radio in Kenya and the UK. Her play The Strong Room was shortlisted by Wole Soyinka in BBA Africa Performance 2010. She is also a producer and founder of KikoPro. KikoPro specializes in publishing diverse Children's Books and Adult Non Fiction Books. 

Thursday, March 12, 2015

WORLD THEATRE DAY MESSAGE 2015

The author of the Message of World Theatre Day 2015 is the Polish director Krzysztof Warlikowski!


The true masters of the theater are most easily found far from the stage. And they generally have no interest in theater as a machine for replicating conventions and reproducing clichés. They search out the pulsing source, the living currents that tend to bypass performance halls and the throngs of people bent on copying some world or another. We copy instead of create worlds that are focused or even reliant on debate with an audience, on emotions that swell below the surface. And actually there is nothing that can reveal hidden passions better than the theater.  

Most often I turn to prose for guidance. Day in and day out I find myself thinking about writers who nearly one hundred years ago described prophetically but also restrainedly the decline of the European gods. the twilight that plunged our civilization into a darkness that has yet to be illumined. I am thinking of Franz Kafka, Thomas Mann and Marcel Proust. Today I would also count John Maxwell Coetzee among that group of prophets.

Their common sense of the inevitable end of the world--not of the planet but of the model of human relations--and of social order and upheaval, is poignantly current for us here and now. For us who live after the end of the world. Who live in the face of crimes and conflicts that daily flare in new places faster even than the ubiquitous media can keep up. These fires quickly grow boring and vanish from the press reports, never to return. And we feel helpless, horrified and hemmed in. We are no longer able to build towers, and the walls we stubbornly construct do not protect us from anything--on the contrary, they themselves demand protection an care that consumes a great part of our life energy. We no longer have the strength to try and glimpse what lies beyond the gate, behind the wall. And that's exactly why theater should exist and where it should seek its strength. To peek inside where looking is forbidden. 

"The legend seeks to explain what cannot be explained. Because it is grounded in truth, it must end in the inexplicable"--this is how Kafka described the transformation of the Prometheus legend. I feel strongly that the same words should describe theater. And it is that kind of theater, one which is grounded in truth and which finds its end in the inexplicable that I wish for all its workers, those on the stage and those in the audience, and I wish that with all my heart. 


Krzysztof Warlikowski

Translation: Philip Boehm
Supported by Theatre Communications Group and the U.S. Center of ITI


Krzysztof Warlikowski is a famous European director. Born in 1962 he is known for his exceptional theatrical images he creates in collaboration with designer Malgorzata Szczesniak. He created new ways to stage Shakespeare, subversive interpretations of the Greek tragedies and is also known for his work with contemporary authors. Since 2008, he has been Artistic Director of Teatre Nowy (New Theatre) in Warsaw. Warlikowski has created a personal vision of the role and place of theater in society by involving the audience in the debate. His motto for the theater became: "Escaping the theater." Warlikowski theater productions have been presented at major festivals: Fesitval of Avignon, Prensa Festival Otono Madrid, Edinburgh International Festival, Vienna Festival, Festival BAM Next Wave of New York, Athens Festival, International Festival Theatre Santiago Mil in Chile, Ponti International Festival in Porto, XXI Festival of Performing Arts in Seoul, South Korea, BITEF Festival in Belgrade. He's received numerous awards from around the world. 

Wednesday, March 11, 2015

"I still get surprised at every little thing around me."--an interview with MARIANA LEVY (Argentina)

What do you hope to gain from this project?
I'm excited about the experience of being part of a creative process that I can't control. Sometimes writing is lonely and you depend only on your own mind and imagination. It's also quite nurturing to get to read the almost raw work of playwrights from parts of the globe I have never even visited...

Who is your greatest writing influence?
Right now: Woody Allen, Paul Auster and Vince Gilligan.

Describe your writing room / process.
I drink a lot of water or different non-alcoholic drinks, Diet Coke, Mate (Argentinian drink, it is like tea, but much more fun, Google it!), I get really thirsty when I think! I have two cats and I like them to be around when I'm writing, preferably close but not on top of my computer...I Google a lot, I ask my friends for ideas for a particular situation or character, I watch movies again or re-read books that I think might put me in the mood for what I'm writing. And when I'm about to finish, a song appears that gives meaning to the whole material. The last days of writing involve listening to that particular song thousands of times while I write.

How old or young are you?
I'm 33. I feel really old for certain things, it still amazes me that fully formed people can be 15 years younger than me... And then I feel amazingly young for other things. I'm still scared about being an adult and I still get surprised at every little thing around me. 

Mariana Levy (Argentina) was born in Buenos Aires. She is currently a playwright, scriptwriter, stage director, and professor. She majored in Literature and Playwriting. She was a member of "Omega", a philosophy and dramatic structures research group. Her plays Misil Children, El Condor, La carne de tu ex en el freezer, and Funde a Negro have been performed in different theatres in Buenos Aires. She is a professor at ENERC Film University, where she teaches and researches dramatic structures in modern TV Series. She does many other things and is usually super funny: to bad this dull bio was written by her evil twin. 
marianevy@gmail.com www.twitter.com/marianevy

Tuesday, March 3, 2015

Kicking Off 2015...Playwright KRISTOFFER DIAZ (NYC, USA)


What do you hope to gain from this project?
It's just great to connect with writers from across the world, collaborating to make something that crosses all imaginable borders. 


What makes a great play in your country?
Impossible to answer, as this country has a wide range of aesthetic tastes. For me, a great play is one that feels like nothing else out there.


How do you wake up?
To the sounds of my son yelling: "Daddy! Dad! It's daytime!"


How old or young are you?
37, which honestly feels ancient. 


Kristoffer Diaz (NYC, USA) is a playwright and educator living and working in Brooklyn. Full-length titles include The Elaborate Entrance of Chad Diety, Welcome to Arroyo’s, The Upstairs Concierge, and The Unfortunates. Awards: 2011 New York Times Outstanding Playwright Award; finalist for the 2010 Pulitzer Prize for Drama; winner, 2011 Lucille Lortel Award for Outstanding Play; winner, 2011 OBIE Award, Best New American Play; and the inaugural Gail Merrifield Papp Fellowship from The Public Theater (2011). His work has been produced, commissioned, and developed at The Public Theatre, Dallas Theatre Center, Geffen Playhouse, Center Theatre Group, The Goodman, Second Stage, Victory Gardens, Oregon Shakespeare Festival, and Actors Theatre of Louisville, among many others. He is a playwright-in-residence at Teatro Vista; a resident playwright at New Dramatists; a co-founder of the Unit Collective (Minneapolis); the creator of the #freescenes project; and a recipient of the Jerome Fellowship, the Future Aesthetics Artist Regrant and the Van Lier Fellowship (New Dramatists). Kristoffer holds a BA from New York University’s Gallatin School of Individualized Study, an MFA from NYU’s Department of Dramatic Writing, and an MFA from Brooklyn College’s Performing Arts Management program.

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

"if you love something, then it's important." Lana Nasser (The Netherlands)

What was your first experience of theater that converted you to wanting to pursue it as a career?

I think I was about 8 or so... I started writing little poems, perhaps to emulate my father, a university professor, poet and writer.  An event was taking place at Jordan University, and my father put me on a stage, before hundreds of students and faculty, to read my poem.  Me, a little kid, in front of all these adults ... it must have left a mark, encouraging me to write giving me the confidence to perform. 


If you could have a drink with any dramatist (living or dead) who would it be and why?

Oscar Wilde ... an eccentric character.  And Ingmar Bergman .... a master and inspiration.  


Why is theater important to you?

Why is theatre important .... I could go on about the power of theatre to change society, to reinterpret the past, scrutinize the present, and envision the future, to tackle taboos and say SOMETHING.... I could go on about the magic of the theatre, the lights, the smell of the stage, and the learning that happens to artists and audiences .... but all that comes from the head - it's been said before... the thing is, you either love it, or you don't ... and if you love something, then it's important.



What advice do you have for new playwrights?

Just write and think of how your words shape society ... what is the story you want to tell, what is the future you want to paint? remember that you know it all, and that you know nothing at all ... have fun with it, and make it truthful ... for at the end, nothing means anything, and anything could mean everything. 



Lana Nasser (The Netherlands) Writer, performer, theatre-maker and translator, with a research background in Consciousness and Dreams, and a passion for dance. Her dramatization of the ensemble playTaman Banat gave her the title of director; and an award for her monodrama In the Lost and Found: Red Suitcase gave her the title of playwright. With an underlying feminist agenda, she co-founded Aat network of women artists in Jordan, and directed their Annual International Women's Day festival since its establishment in 2010. Lana leads creative expression and empowerment courses for underprivileged women and youth, specialized journeys to sacred sites in Jordan, and artistic environmental and peace campaigns. With academic publication, creative articles, and dabbles in poetry; she is now working on her first book. Jordanian-Palestinian by origin, American by citizenship and education, she is now living in the Netherlands.

Monday, March 24, 2014

Celebrating World Theatre Day Around the World

The NYC World Theatre Day Coalition celebrates with the Around-the-Globe Chain Play, but if you find yourself elswhere in the world here are ways others are celebrating

50 Years of Community Theater Seraing (Brussels) 

Centre Culturel de Seraing an "official" launch ceremony of this anniversary year. On this occasion will read the message of the World Theatre Day. http://www.centrecultureldeseraing.be



National Centre for Culture and Arts (Jordan)


The National Centre for Culture and Arts will celebrate World Theatre Day on the 26th of March at 6:00 pm. The event will be held under the patronage of the Minister of Culture and will feature artistic performances and the reading of the ITI message. www.pac.org.jo

"The new Face of the Acting Teacher" (France)


International Colloquium celebrating the World Theatre Day will feature their program "The New Face of the Acting Teacher" "Les processus de direction d'acteurs, de transmission et d'echanges" Labex Arts H2H at the Conservatoire national superieur d'art dramatique. 27th March 10 a.m to 10 p.m. Salle Louis Jouvet.



Inxusa Theater Festival and Colloquium 2014 (Bulawayo, Zimbabe)


Professor David Kerr will speak at the 3rd edition of the Inxusa Festival and Colloquieum.

http://www.panorama.co.zw/index.php/archives/117-visual-arts/698-professor-david-kerr-to-headline-2014-inxusa-theatre-festival-and-colloquium

Screening of ”The Tightrope” (Stockholm)


Screening the unique film ”the Tightrope” about the director Peter Brook, directed by his son, the filmmaker Simon Brook. Prior to the film screening, this year’s World Theatre messages will be read in Swedish by the actress Ann Petrén.  After the film, we will have a discussion with Simon Brook about the film and his father. The evening ends with a reception.







5 @ 7 of 27 led by Dominique Leduc (Montreal)


On the occasion of World Theatre Day, the Conseil québécois du théâtre invites you to attend the ceremony Sentinel Price CQT and celebrate our peers recipients of awards for excellence in theater 

during the cocktail 5 @ 7. 
* Reading Québec message written by Alexis Martin, co-artistic director of New Experimental Theatre 
      French version read by Alexis Martin 
      English version translated and read by playwright Michael Mackenzie 
* Reading the international message, written by Brett Bailey, dramatist, designer, director and South African artist 
* Celebrating the award winners received in 2013


Theater to meet the public (Montreal)


Come watch the short theatrical performances performed by students of vocational schools of theater, on March 27, 12 am - 13: 30 pm and 16 pm - 17 h 30 in different places Espace culturel Georges-Émile Lapalme - Place des Arts in Montreal.



Making a Scene 2014 - An Ignition The Future of Theatre (Vancouver)


Reading of the World Theatre Day Message at 5pm during the Annual Conference on March 27th. Performance Works 1218 Cartwright St Vancouver,Canada


Il Pozzo Dei Desideri (Italy)

A two-part theatrical event. At BARCODE CAFE the first part is dedicated to children with the company IMPRESSIONS OF THEATRE with the show WAS MORE' THAN ONCE to follow customary cutting of the cake that will be offered to you and we will read the message written in 2014 by Brett Bailey. The second part of the evening by the company THE WELL OF WISHES with readings, sketches, improvizationa and much more, without forgetting the moment poetry and the moment where the audience who wants to can try this fantastic world.  Along with the INN OF FACTORS Murder by Death LAST NIGHT SCENES IN HEAVEN TORN company investigator who will be the most clever of the evening? 

Friday, March 21, 2014

"There is something about a collective experience..." Anuvab Pal (India)

What was your first experience of theater that converted you to wanting to pursue it as a career?

I saw Tom Stoppard's The Real Thing on Broadway and that sort of changed everything.  


If you could have a drink with any dramatist (living or dead) who would it be and why?

There used to be many but as I've got older, I've realized it is much more fun to know the person through the work. The person invariably ends up being like everyone else. 


Why is theater important to you?


There is something about a collective experience that we don't share that much anymore. Theatre is perhaps the only place left. 


If you could have one of your plays produced in any country in the world, which play and which country would you choose, and why?

The National Theatre in London. I learnt a lot of stuff from those stages. 


Anuvab Pal (India) is a playwright, screenwriter, stand up comic and author. His plays include: Chaos Theory (over 250 production internationally, Finalist BBC World Playwrighting Competition 2007), The President is Coming, 1-888-Dial-India, Fatwa, Out of Fashion, Life, Love & EBITDA and The Bureaucrat. His films include Loins of Punjab (co-written with Manish Acharya) and The President is Coming. He performs his stand up regularly at The Comedy Store Mumbai. Articles and opinions as well as articles and interviews on his work have been featured in The New York Times, BBC, Time Magazine, Elle, Vogue, GQ India, The Guardian, Indian Express just to name a few. http://anuvabpal.wordpress.com/

Thursday, March 20, 2014

Nina Mitrović (Croatia), "Theatre is Freedom."

What was your first experience of theater that converted you to wanting to pursue it as a career?


When I was ten a bunch of kids bullied my younger brother on a playground. The top bully got physical. Others were happy, they cheered. I took one of the swings and swung it right into the bully’s head. The gang just stood there, no one did a thing. Then the bully walked away. And that hasn’t changed til this day – I fight for what I believe in. The only difference is, now I don’t need a swing. Words do the job perfectly.


If you could have a drink with any dramatist (living or dead) who would it be and why?


Edward Albee. I know he’d challenge my mind, wouldn’t refrain from saying fuck and would make me laugh.


Why is theater important to you?


Theatre is freedom. Freedom to show another face of the world, one we prefer to keep hidden. In doing so we uncover emotion and truth. And to achieve that, you can’t compromise. You can’t settle for less. I know I won’t. If I did, I’d stop caring for it.


What advice do you have for new playwrights?


The same one I’d give to myself – trust your guts and go for it. That’s if you have talent. If not, this question is irrelevant.



Nina Mitrović (Croatia) was awarded a BA in Dramaturgy from the Academy of Drama Arts in Zagreb and an MA in Screenwriting from London Film School. Her award-winning plays and monologues have been produced professionally in Croatia, Austria, Germany, Finland, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Slovenia, Macedonia and Bosnia and Herzegovina. They include: Encounter (2012), Javier (part of Zagreb pentagram project, 2009), This bed is too short or just fragments (2004.), When We Dead Slay Each Other (2004), An Instant-Powder Family (2003), Neighbourhood Upside Down (2002). Her plays have been presented at international festivals in Berlin (Berliner Festspiele - Theatertreffen Festival), London (LabFest at Theatre 503), Sibiu (International Theatre Festival), Paris, Buenos Aires, Brno (Divaldofeste Yougo Festival) and New York (Playwright's Week Festival). Her work has been translated into ten languages and published in Croatian and international magazines and anthologies. She is also the author of radio plays and radio documentaries awarded and presented at international festivals in Berlin, Milan and Zagreb.