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Shakespeare tragédiájának gyönyörű töredékeiből álomszerűen szővödik össze Júlia története. Júlia két hangon és nyelven (angol-magyar) szólal felidézve azt a sűrű, búja és végzetes hat napot, mely szenvedélyt és kétségbeesést, gyászt, nászt és halált hozott neki. A magyar nyelven játszó Ubrankovics Júlia, aki a 40. Magyar Filmszemlén elnyerte a legjobb színésznő díját és Sophie Thomson, aki Londonból érkezett Budapestre a nővévállás rítusaként, középkori dalokkal, hús-vér eleven erővel és bájjal idészik meg Shakespeare legszebb szellemét: Júliát. In this bilingual (English and Hungarian) performance beautiful fragments of Shakespeare's tragedy evoke Juliet as an eternal memory, as a waking dream. She re-lives those sweet, dense and dark six days that brought her passion and desperation, grief and joy and her untimely death. Ubrankovics Julia who plays in Hungarian has recently received the prize for best actress on the 40th Hungarian Filmweek. Together with Sophie Thompson from London they take you through this rite of passage into womanhood with rituals and medieval singing. This theatre-seance conjures up Shakespeare's most beautiful ghost: Juliet.

Friss topikok

  • gybala: I really liked the customes on the show!! Good ideas... (2009.04.20. 23:12) Magony Zsuzsanna
  • Natália: Why hmmmmm? Do elaborate. (2009.01.03. 02:06) Flowers
  • Natália: wow superb. I am very excited. Will write again soon. (2008.12.26. 23:24) Dramaturgy
  • Natália: First of Miss T: what does she mean to you? What motivates you to play her? And what is her dilemm... (2008.12.22. 14:40) First Meeting - Sophie

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Színházi Munkanapló / Performance Diary

2009.04.08. 15:10 Natália

Sweet-meet

Grinned Misi over his banaba-shake in the Odeon while he was throwing compliments at local divasto the right, and criticism at me to the left. 

Bananashake in the centre,.

For him it was too dense, to much, less is more he said, did't like the costumes, there were far to many lights, too many changes back and forward between languages - he added, while I pulled an english rose and nodded and agreed.

Oppinions are very valuable, and you can not argue with them. At best you can challenge them, but I didnt have that on my agenda. I have been talking way too much lately I wanted to listen. And learn as always - the nerd I am.

I might want to challenge oppinions, modes of spectatorhip, traditional performer-audience relations with the work itself, I have no intention of arguing the preception of the performance.

What I definately would like to do is to share something, to show something.

Altough preception is a factor that I should have taken more into account, or is it the local context? Some people come with their ready-made ideas about how this cannonised text should be staged, people from the industry mainly they are, and perhaps that stops them from appriciating Sweet-meet (Mihaly, Szabados 2009) for what it is. They approach it from what it should be. What they would want it to be.

I changed the title, hoping that that audience would venture in the Shakespearian-unknown with us:

Wellcome the the unconsciouos of an underdevelopped character.

Let's see a few ways we might approach re-telling/remembering the story.

If this was still a tragedy, I would have called it Poison Bones, or Bloody Ribs or something.

This piece was made with love and care for you to enjoy.

Not to high-culture-tickle a select few.

Ok, I was a bit random here, but give me a break, this is a blog and spring just kicked in.

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