“Fear Eats The Soul”: Love In The Grip of Hate
…all the time. But at least let the theatre prevent us from forgetting it completely. Photo from the official page of the performance on the festival’s website. Photo: Juergen…
Read MorePosted by Emiliia Dementsova | 11th Oct 2023 | Adaptation, Festivals, Germany, Review, Theatre and Film, Theatre Olympics 2023
…all the time. But at least let the theatre prevent us from forgetting it completely. Photo from the official page of the performance on the festival’s website. Photo: Juergen…
Read MorePosted by Tawanda Mupatsi | 23rd Apr 2024 | Review, Theatre and Politics, Zimbabwe
…in the production is painful to watch; it’s an unapologetic reference to history’s sensitive pages, boldly underlining the wrongs committed in the name of order and their snowball effect. Without…
Read MorePosted by Emiliia Dementsova | 9th Oct 2023 | Festivals, Romania, Theatre Olympics 2023
…people, does not grumble and is not embittered. The Book of Ruth. Photographer Oana Monica Nae. The carousel of memory resurrects disparate images and pages of life, details and faces….
Read MorePosted by Martin Blaszk | 29th Nov 2023 | Brazil, Poland, Review
…Vladimir Herzog, Dom Phillips and Bruno Pereira. [8] Information taken from the unpublished credits for the film, sent to the author in the form of a one page PDF document….
Read MorePosted by S.E. Gontarski | 5th Dec 2023 | Collaborating Across Cultures, Poland, Theatre and Film, Translation
…that cuts into or across current spaces, on page or stage, and severs them, cuts received lines of thought, opens them to previously overlooked, underplayed, and misinterpreted entities that reside…
Read MorePosted by Ahram Online | 10th Oct 2023 | Egypt, Festivals, News
…Details on She Arts can be found on the festival’s Facebook page, while tickets are available at TicketsMarche. This article appeared in AhramOnline on September 29, 2023, and has been…
Read MorePosted by Mert Dilek | 4th Feb 2024 | London, Review, Theatre and Politics, United Kingdom
…strives to train the promising writer in the fundamentals of “artful” dramaturgy, steering him away from his habit of replicating on the page—indeed, transcribing—conversations he hears (and overhears) in his…
Read MorePosted by David O'Donnell | 21st Mar 2024 | Design, Essay, Festivals, New Zealand
…in many ways: this slippage between private and public is symptomatic of a very conscious process of gifting public space to private individuals and corporations in the hope that they…
Read MorePosted by David O'Donnell | 19th Apr 2024 | Adaptation, New Zealand, Review, Worldwide
…between different versions of the past, and the slippage between what is true and what isn’t. Chabert’s production highlighted the distinction in voices with Dux performing the “he” voice live…
Read MorePosted by Verity Healey | 14th Jun 2023 | London, Review, United Kingdom
…wind by the minutest chaotic detail and skewered perspective. Oh, and the dry Yorkshire wit. Did I mention that? On the page, the words might not seem much. But the…
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