Is Polish Theatre Under the Threat? News From Kraków
The Old Theatre in Kraków has just got a new General Director. Surprisingly, or maybe even...
Read MoreKasia Lech, with a PhD from University College Dublin, is a scholar, actor, storyteller, puppeteer, and Associate Professor at the University of Amsterdam. Her research and creative practice explore theatre through practice-based and traditional scholarship and primarily focus on verse, multilingualism, migration, translation, and transnational experience. Kasia’s monograph Dramaturgy of Form: Verse in Contemporary Theatre (Routledge, 2021) explores verse in twenty-first-century practice across different languages, cultures, and media. Her Multilingual Dramaturgies: Towards New European Theatre (Springer, 2024) features over 60 languages that arise from state, ethnicity, region, and disability to argue for multilingual theatre's central role in Europe’s futures. Kasia published on verse in contemporary performance, theatre translation, multilingual theatre, multilingual actor, European theatre, theatre and animal rights, and puppetry. Kasia trained at the Polish National Academy of Theatre Arts and performed internationally in theatre, television, radio, and film, including starring as the Grey Cat, a puppet that co-hosted the awarded live TV show for children CyberMysz on Polish national television. She co-founded Polish Theatre Ireland, an intercultural and multilingual theatre company based in Dublin. She co-convenes the Translation Adaptation Dramaturgy working group at the International Federation for Theatre Research.
Posted by Kasia Lech | 10th May 2017 | News, Poland, Theatre and Politics
The Old Theatre in Kraków has just got a new General Director. Surprisingly, or maybe even...
Read MorePosted by Kasia Lech | 18th Mar 2017 | Directing, Essay, Poland, Theatre and Politics
This series continues to introduce Polish directors recognised in Poland and relatively unknown...
Read MorePosted by Kasia Lech | 11th Feb 2017 | Directing, Essay, Poland
This series will introduce Polish directors whose work is recognised in Poland, but they are...
Read MorePosted by Kasia Lech | 26th Jan 2017 | News, Poland, Theatre and Politics
The year 2016 was marked by theatre artists resisting narratives imposed by the Polish government...
Read MorePosted by Kasia Lech | 21st Jan 2017 | News, Poland, Puppetry, Theatre and Politics
The final Polish premiere of 2016 was Triumf Woli [The Triumph of the Will] prepared by the...
Read MorePosted by Kasia Lech | 24th Dec 2016 | Adaptation, News, Poland
In Poland, the word “refugee” is now used by school children as an insult, as revealed by a...
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