I’ve just embarked on another marathon in German theatre. This year, I partly want to see just how marked (if at all) the difference are between theatre in Berlin and the rest of the country. Last year, I repeatedly heard that because directors travel so much and even actors aren’t quite as stable in their […]
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I am very glad to say that the Stratford production of Maria Stuart, directed by Antoni Cimolino, is quite, quite excellent. I do go on about how much our theatre lacks stagings of Schiller and other underperformed classics, after all, and I wasn’t at all sure how the Festival would present this play. Having seen […]
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I’ve just started posting on Tumblr, here: shorterdispositio.tumblr.com
This new micro-blog, dispositio’s little sibling, will largely consist of trailers and photos from contemporary productions of classical plays. Possibly, I’ll write the odd very short post, but the bulk of what I have to say will still appear on here — the tumblr is […]
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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, yes. After seven days of gushing posts, I’ve come back down to earth.
This is not all bad news. The first not-so-exciting show was a contemporary play, which I had picked specifically as a control sample. Since this entire theatre marathon is part of my nascent research project on Anglophone and Germanophone stagings of […]
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Certain theatrical experiences stick with you. I doubt I will ever forget a production of Buechner’s Leonce and Lena directed by Andreas Kriegenburg at the Residenztheater in Munich that I saw in 1999. The stage was a huge steeply raked field of artificial turf; at one point, one character watered the grass, and another figure […]
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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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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.