I’m posting a string of German season announcements for 2013/14 on my tumblr.
These are kind of amazing documents: proper books, sometimes well over 100 pages long, that introduce the ensemble for the coming season — with full-size head shots and detailed bios — but more importantly, provide information about the next season’s […]
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My second Romeo and Juliet in Germany this year, and a much more satisfying production than Lars Eidinger’s at the Schaubuehne, which I saw in May. That’s not to say that the two productions were worlds apart: in fact, they approached the play in broadly similar ways (and Bettina Bruinier’s version premiered three […]
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My final day in Berlin, my sixth show at the Deutsches Theater: finally Shakespeare. And relatively rarely performed Shakespeare, too: Coriolanus, in a new translation by Andres Marber that to my mind got more right than wrong – it certainly didn’t interfere with my enjoyment as much as the late Thomas Brasch’s famed version of […]
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Well, fuck.
This was a production I had looked forward to. The photos promised fun, if nothing else. It was supposed to be an unsentimental take on the play, putting desire above love. And Lars Eidinger is an exceptionally talented actor who has done great work in Shakespearean roles — his Hamlet in particular has […]
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German stagings of classics are often exciting because they draw attention to the challenges as well as the necessity of playing works of the past — they find an enormous source of energy in the friction between old and new rather than papering over the distance between text and performance with the tired blend of […]
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Ah, it’s been a while, but it’s time for another instalment in this sad chronicle of inane Shakespeareana.
This one is painful, I have to admit. It’s one thing to have actors spout nonsense, or to get to listen to a once-important historian with no established expertise in the subject; but […]
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A shamelessly self-indulgent post — I have a very exciting May in Berlin ahead of me. Here’s the itinerary, with lots of links to trailers (almost all the links are in English):
May 1: Don Juan (Moliere/Rene Pollesch) – Volksbuehne
Part of the Volksbuehne’s current exploration of Moliere (the other pieces are versions […]
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Oy. It’s been a while. A stupendously busy January, a long February, ten days in bed with the plague (or else a flu I caught in the UK). Sorry, reader.
But I am back with happy news: there IS exciting classical theatre in Canada after all. I have just witnessed the most riveting performance of […]
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Holger Syme's work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License.Images may be reused as long as their source is properly attributed in accordance with the Creative Commons License detailed above. Many of the photos here were taken at the Folger Shakespeare Library; please consult their policy on digital images as well.