Well-made, and massively weird: A new theater season in Berlin
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Monday, December 30, 2024


Well-made, and massively weird: A new theater season in Berlin
In a photo provided by Thomas Aurin shows, “Baracke” at the Deutsches Theater in Berlin. Recent premieres in the city ranged from a spare take on the recent Broadway hit “Prima Facie” to a dose of sheer artistic lunacy. (Thomas Aurin via The New York Times)

by A.J. Goldmann



BERLIN.- It may be less polished and more rough-hewed than in New York, London or Paris, but Berlin’s theater scene is uniquely diverse, unpredictable and boundary-pushing. Buoyed by lavish public subsidies and boasting a fleet of remarkable actors and daring directors, it is also uncommonly accessible, thanks to low ticket prices and the growing popularity of English surtitles.

This season, Berlin’s five main repertory theaters will present a total of 87 premieres, 29 of them at the Deutsches Theater, a storied playhouse that opened in 1883. Its new artistic director, Iris Laufenberg, opened her tenure by programing the German-language premiere of Suzie Miller’s “Prima Facie,” a recent hit on Broadway and the West End that won Tony and Olivier Awards, including for its star, Jodie Comer.

Hungarian director Andras Domotor stages the one-woman play as a chamber drama, with minimal props, stark fluorescent lighting and lots of empty space for his star, Mercy Dorcas Otieno. While the staging embraces a degree of abstraction rarely seen in commercial theater in London or New York, the show is also a vehicle for a prodigious and fearless actress.

Otieno, who was born in Kenya, delivers a sweaty and emotionally naked performance as a lawyer who defends men accused of sexual assault, and then finds herself the plaintiff in such a case after she is raped by a colleague. She carries this intense 100-minute-long show on her capable shoulders and commands our attention long after the absorbing drama of the play’s first half gives way to clunky speechifying toward the end of the evening.

A more compelling and disquieting exploration of sexual assault and trauma is “In Memory of Doris Bither,” written and directed by Yana Thönnes and running at the Schaubühne. The play is based on the true story behind the 1982 film “The Entity,” a hit horror flick that starred Barbara Hershey as a woman who claimed she was sexually assaulted by a malevolent spirit occupying her house in Los Angeles. In 1974, Bither, a single mother living with her four children, was at the center of a sensational investigation into paranormal activity that Hollywood later served up for entertainment.

Performed in a mix of German and English (with surtitles in both languages), “In Memory of Doris Bither” does not so much recreate the alleged haunting as examine how the case — and the success of “The Entity” — reverberates. On Katharina Pia Schütz’s sparse set, the interior of a sterile suburban home, a wash of pink wallpaper, carpeting and curtains, actors Ruth Rosenfeld, Kate Strong and Heinrich Horwitz obsessively sift through memories and try to make sense of Bither’s torment. The play’s horror, it becomes clear, is not supernatural but psychological.

My only complaint about this absorbing and uncanny show is that it ended abruptly after 70 intense minutes. Then again, the play’s unfinished quality, its lack of resolution, may be intentional: Bither, who died in 1999, claimed the haunting was real until the very end.

At the start of this busy theater season, new plays by two leading German-language writers were elevated by young, dynamic directors who crafted fluid and stylish productions for texts that were rather uneven.




Novelist and playwright Rainald Goetz shot to prominence 40 years ago with the novel “Insane,” a nightmarish odyssey through a madhouse. Ever since, he has been a bad boy of the German literary scene, known for a sprawling literary blog and a novel about ’90s techno culture. His latest, “Baracke,” is a poetic, rambling and infuriatingly undramatic play about German history, family violence and the impossibility of finding love.

For the work’s world premiere at the Deutsches Theater, the young Swiss director Claudia Bossard has served up a stylistically varied, epoch-spanning staging that provides a gloss on Goetz’s epic grouse while sometimes subverting it. Nine intrepid actors courageously follow their director into battle, even if the stakes of Goetz’s stream-of-consciousness text aren’t always clear.

Over at the Berliner Ensemble, there was more focused critique in prolific German-Swiss writer Sybille Berg’s “Things Can Only Get Better” (“Es kann doch nur noch besser werden”) a dystopian parable about AI and the Metaverse taking over our lives. It’s somewhere between a screed, a cautionary tale and a blackly comic satire.

Director Max Lindemann floods the stage with digital projections, while actors with illuminated smartphones glued to their hands cavort jerkily on a rotating platform. The characters receive an endless succession of Amazon packages, praise the “great men who have made our lives so easy: Bill, Jeff and, naturally, Elon” and brag about using ChatGPT to write plays. Everything Berg says does seem worrying, but her targets are a bit obvious and the dialogue is often glib.

Like with “Baracke,” the production comes to the rescue, with movement, light, outlandish costumes and eclectic music by Swiss DJ Olan! It’s another step in the right direction for the Berliner Ensemble, the playhouse that has recently cast off its conservative reputation and emerged as one of the Germany’s most interesting theaters.

It has become de rigeur to bemoan the loss of Berlin’s gleefully anarchic and experimental side, most clearly represented, perhaps, by the recent transformation of a famous former squat into the slick photography exhibition center Fotografiska. But Berlin can still be relied on to deliver some sheer artistic lunacy.

“Toter Salon” is a monthly series of short performances written and directed by Lydia Haider and performed in an intimate venue at the Volksbühne theater. During the most recent installment, “Blut,” Haider stood in front of a coffin and officiated a gleefully blasphemous Mass, which was frequently drowned out by the droning and often earsplitting score, by Austrian electronic music artist Jung An Tagen.

In her satanic priest garb, Haider also approached the spectators with an ice bucket full of white wine spritzer, which she drizzled into the mouths of willing audience members. For those unwilling to get down on their knees to receive her communion, there were Bloody Marys in plastic shot glasses. Sloppy, underdeveloped and massively weird, the hourlong performance was an endurance test.

Yet suffering though the plumes of cigarette smoke, cheap booze and earsplitting music, I was oddly pleased that Berlin’s theater scene could accommodate both this level of experimental insanity and a well-made play like “Prima Facie.” Berlin may have lost much of its famed wildness, but at least when it comes to theater, there’s something for everyone.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










Today's News

October 12, 2023

A swirling Philadelphia mosaic will be sacrificed for housing

War Child UK returns to Flowers Gallery 30 years on with fundraising exhibitions 'Lost Girls'

Getty presents exhibition to commemorate Walt Disney Concert Hall's twentieth anniversary

Alabama sculpture park aims to look at slavery without flinching

Photographer Talia Chetrit featured in Wadsworth Atheneum's MATRIX Series

Personal journals, manuscripts and an archive of letters from John Steinbeck to be auctioned

Young V&A opens Japan: Myths to Manga - its first exhibition for children and families

'The Paradox of Proximity: Agostino Bonalumi and Lee Seung Jio' presented by Mazzoleni & Kukje Gallery

BMW in collaboration with the Polish National Opera announce premiere of EVOLVER

Rare fine silver carp leads Bonhams Japanese sales

Exhibition walkthrough 'Invisible Questions That Fill the Air: James Lee Byars and Seung-taek Lee'

Digital currency becomes tangible treasure in Heritage's Otoh Collection of Physical Cryptocurrency Platinum Event

Ann Patchett isn't parting with WordPerfect

Well-made, and massively weird: A new theater season in Berlin

Group exhibition 'ORIGIN OF THE STONE' features artists from Central Europe now at Gandy Gallery

Artistic and scientific perspectives presented in exhibition illustrating paths for ecosystemic recovery

Arizona Artist debuts 'Entangled Beauty' in solo exhibit at Jen Tough Gallery

GRIMM and Hales now showing 'Double Spar', dual solo exhibition by Anthony Cudahy

Review: 'Merrily We Roll Along,' finally found in the dark

Move over, Machu Picchu: There's more to see in Peru

Breakers grapple with hip-hop's big Olympic moment

Balanchine blue: A clean field for dance that says 'City Ballet'

'The Confessions' review: A mother's tale, told with empathy and care

Watch that reached deepest place in world ocean surfaces at Heritage Watches & Fine Timepieces Auction

An Honest Yabby Casino Review: Your Ultimate Guide to Online Gaming

Achieve SEO Success with the Best Canton SEO Company

4rabet India: A Betting Experience Like No Other

Polanco's Comfortable Hotel for Day of the Dead

ArtPix 3D. Crafting Unforgettable Father's Day Gifts

Wholesome and Flavorful: Exploring the Best Healthy Recipes for a Balanced Diet




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
(52 8110667640)

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Attorneys
Truck Accident Attorneys
Accident Attorneys
Houston Dentist
Abogado de accidentes
สล็อต
สล็อตเว็บตรง
Motorcycle Accident Lawyer

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site Parroquia Natividad del Señor
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful