Plays from Romania: Dramaturgies of Subversion
eBook - ePub

Plays from Romania: Dramaturgies of Subversion

Lowlands; The Spectator Sentenced to Death; The Passport; Stories of the Body (Artemisia, Eva, Lina, Teresa); The Man Who Had All His Malice Removed; Sexodrome

Mihaela Panainte, Matéi Visniec, György Dragomán, András Visky, Jozefina Komporaly, Jozefina Komporaly

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eBook - ePub

Plays from Romania: Dramaturgies of Subversion

Lowlands; The Spectator Sentenced to Death; The Passport; Stories of the Body (Artemisia, Eva, Lina, Teresa); The Man Who Had All His Malice Removed; Sexodrome

Mihaela Panainte, Matéi Visniec, György Dragomán, András Visky, Jozefina Komporaly, Jozefina Komporaly

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About This Book

Plays from Romania: Dramaturgies of Subversion reflects the diversity of dramatic writing exploring the past and present of Romania, and takes stock thirty years after the collapse of communism. In addition to plays originally written in Romanian, the collection includes work by German, Hungarian and Roma authors born and/or working in Romania, and brings together plays written during the communist period and its aftermath. The plays included in the collection, edited and translated by Jozefina Komporaly and fully published for the first time in English, demonstrate broad variety in terms of form and content – ranging from family dramas to allegories, and absurdist experiments to modular texts rooted in open dramaturgy – and are the work of both individual playwrights and the results of collective creation. These works share a preoccupation with critically reflecting urgent concerns rooted in Romanian realities, and are notable dramaturgical experiments that push the boundaries of the genre. In addition, these plays also seek novel ways to examine universal experiences of the human condition, such as love, loss, abuse, betrayal, grief, violence, manipulation and despair. This unique anthology celebrates the renewed vitality and variety of writing for the stage after 1990, and endeavours to place Romanian theatre in a forward-looking transnational context. Lowlands ('Niederungen') by Herta Müller, adapted for the stage by Mihaela Panainte (German)
This stage adaptation is based on a volume of short stories by Herta Müller written in German in 1982 and focuses on the perspective of a child narrator, by way of a series of episodes that centre on mundane aspects of daily life in a remote village against the backdrop of the oppressive atmosphere of mid-twentieth century Romania. The Spectator Sentenced to Death ('Spectatorul condamnat la moarte') by Matéi Visniec (Romanian)
This play is a bitter parody of the Stalinist justice system, which totally disregards the fundamental question whether the accused is actually guilty or not. The Passport ('Kalucsni') by György Dragomán (Hungarian)
This play is set pre-1989 in a typical small town in the Transylvanian province of Romania, in which the lives of the various social classes, and the fate of the persecuted and that of those who persecute are closely intertwined. The Man Who Had His Inner Evil Removed (' Omul din care a fost extras raul ' ) by Matéi Visniec (Romanian)
This topical play is a sharp reflection on the voluntary servitude in which we place ourselves, often unawares, in conditions of our contemporary consumer culture, and a fierce critique of increasingly dominant tendencies to abandon moral criteria in political life. Stories of the Body (Artemisia, Eva, Lina, Teresa) ('A test történetei') by András Visky (Hungarian)
The cycle Stories of the Body comprises four plays based on real life stories as experienced by remarkable women (including Mother Teresa and Italian Renaissance painter Artemisia Gentileschi), and are connected to various cities including Budapest, Cluj/Kolozsvár, Kolkata and Rome, from the 17th to the 21st century. Sexodrom by Giuvlipen Theatre Company (Mihaela Dragan, Antonella Lerca Duda, Nicoleta Ghita, Zita Moldovan, Bety Pisica, Oana Rusu, Raj Alexandru Udrea), based on a concept by Bogdan Georgescu. (Roma)
This is a work of collective creation by members of the Roma Theatre company Giuvlipen, aiming to bring to public attention taboo subjects, to enhance the visibility of Roma performers and to experiment with new forms of theatre-making in a Romanian context.

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Information

Publisher
Methuen Drama
Year
2021
ISBN
9781350214316

The Man Who Had His Inner Evil Removed

Matéi Visniec
Translated from the Romanian by Jozefina Komporaly
(Original title in Romanian: Omul din care a fost extras răul)
Book title
4 Matéi Visniec: The Man Who Had His Inner Evil Removed – book cover design by Andra Badulesco Visniec for Cartea Românească, 2014.

Characters

Eric Nowickicelebrity journalist
VanessaTV presenter
Mr Rat
The model family:
DadBaldur
MumErika
SonArno
DaughterHannah
GrandmaDita
BabyLaura
PoodlePacinto
Mr Kuntz
Tonyjournalist
Wandajournalist
President
Spokeswoman
Butlers
Investigators
Old Man
Librarian
Rats
Siamese Sopranos (one white, one black, conjoined at the back)
Other characters passing by: Journalists, Students, Tenants, Experts, Audience, etc.
When entering the auditorium, spectators will find on stage a ‘set’ composed of say sixteen plasma screens.
The arrival of the audience and their taking a seat in the auditorium could be filmed from sixteen different angles, and these images could be projected via a ‘live feed’.
Journalism without Hypocrisy: Lesson 1
For the first few minutes, the screens show live footage of Eric on his way from backstage to the set. We see Eric in hair and make-up, getting ready for his appearance. An assistant gives him a head massage.
He walks through several corridors. Someone gives Eric a microphone, the director taps him on the shoulder, a few colleagues wish him good luck.
Tango music.
Eric appears, and is instantly placed in the spotlight. It feels as if a tango teacher burst onto the dancefloor.
On-screen applause (or, a few strategically planted ‘fans’ could start clapping in the auditorium).
Throughout this scene, Eric will be in dialogue with a group of ‘fans’ who absolutely worship him. We are already in the middle of the ‘show’, although it isn’t clear whether Eric is in a TV studio or in a lecture theatre.
Eric Welcome to the Eric Nowicki course of journalism!
Students applaud him.
Eric The only place in the world where journalism is being taught without hypocrisy! The Eric Nowicki School of Journalism!
Students shout ‘Eric! Eric!’
Eric And because this is a course of journalism without hypocrisy, I won’t be a hypocrite either!
Students No! No! No!
Eric I’ll tell you all.
Students Yes! Yes! Yes!
Eric You’ll find out the truth about this profession!
Students The truth! The truth! The truth!
Eric produces a remote control from his pocket and switches on all sixteen screens. On each screen, there appears a different image from news bulletins transmitted by various international channels (BBC World News, CNN, Fox News, Al Jazeera, LCI, Euronews, Sky News, France 24, Rai, etc.)
Eric There’s nothing I’d hold back from you!
Students Nothing! Nothing! Nothing!
Eric begins a striptease number. Spiralling mayhem.
Eric You’ll find out the naked truth!
Students The naked truth! The naked truth! The naked truth!
Eric throws off his hat, removes his tie, his vest, and then, wantonly, undoes the buttons on his shirt. He opens it suddenly to reveal the words ‘BORN TO WATCH TV!’ tattooed on his chest.
Eric Look at the naked truth!
Students Aargh!
A great deal of excitement. A few female students want to touch Eric. He turns his back to the audience and removes his shirt altogether. We see the following words tattooed on his back: ‘BORN TO HAVE FUN!’
Students Whoa!
Eric So what is journalism?
Students A TV fucking bloody fun!
Eric Yeees!
Students Yeees!
Eric You’ve got it?
Students We’ve got it!
Eric Journalism is a form of planetary show!
Students Yeaaaah!
Eric Pure adrenaline! Incitement! Sensation! Spectacle!
Students Yes! Yes! Yes!
Eric What is the eight o’clock news?
Students Adrenaline, provocation, sensation, spectacle!
Eric A slice of the world’s misery! A sample of horror! A hovering flight over humanity’s failure! Each and every news bulletin is ninety per cent human filth, moral repugnance, violence and cowardice, cynicism and existential diarrhoea, rottenness and abandon, ethical snot and civic disaster.
The Students remain silent.
Eric This is what you get on television, this is what you get in newsreels, this is what you get in news bulletins. A hymn to death, violence, money, sex and theft! This is what information has become in our world. A forum for showcasing death, violence, money, sex and corruption! Would you like to become good journalists? Here are your topics: death, war, crisis, famine, catastrophe, delinquency, blackmail, prostitution, trafficking, torture, theft. An interesting information is a negative information! Repeat after me, you bastards!
Students An interesting information is a negative information.
Eric An information that doesn’t produce adrenaline is useless.
Students An information that doesn’t produce adrenaline is useless.
Eric A train that arrives to destination on time is not an information.
Students Nooo.
Eric So what is an information?
Students A train that is delayed…
Eric Well done, you idiots!
Students A train that derails…
Eric May I call you idiots?
Students Eric! Eric! Eric!
Eric yanks the tattoo off his chest as if he removed his skin.
Underneath ‘BORN TO WATCH TV’ there is another text: ‘FUCK THE PUBLIC’.
Eric Why does modern man need information?
Students For stimulation…
Eric How should a news bulletin begin?
Students With blood!
Eric Blood indeed, this is what modern man has for breakfast. As soon as he wakes up, modern man craves blood. And then, while shaving in the bathroom, he listens to the news. And he drinks his coffee watching the first foreign affairs programme of the day. And if the news weren’t enough of a scoop, if the day didn’t start with an adequate number of deaths, if nothing sensational had happened on the planet, our man is frustrated.
He turns down the volume on all TV sets (better still, one could freeze the on-screen images at this ...

Table of contents

Citation styles for Plays from Romania: Dramaturgies of Subversion

APA 6 Citation

Panainte, M., Visniec, M., Dragomán, G., & Visky, A. (2021). Plays from Romania: Dramaturgies of Subversion (1st ed.). Bloomsbury Publishing. Retrieved from https://www.perlego.com/book/2882809/plays-from-romania-dramaturgies-of-subversion-lowlands-the-spectator-sentenced-to-death-the-passport-stories-of-the-body-artemisia-eva-lina-teresa-the-man-who-had-all-his-malice-removed-sexodrome-pdf (Original work published 2021)

Chicago Citation

Panainte, Mihaela, Matéi Visniec, György Dragomán, and András Visky. (2021) 2021. Plays from Romania: Dramaturgies of Subversion. 1st ed. Bloomsbury Publishing. https://www.perlego.com/book/2882809/plays-from-romania-dramaturgies-of-subversion-lowlands-the-spectator-sentenced-to-death-the-passport-stories-of-the-body-artemisia-eva-lina-teresa-the-man-who-had-all-his-malice-removed-sexodrome-pdf.

Harvard Citation

Panainte, M. et al. (2021) Plays from Romania: Dramaturgies of Subversion. 1st edn. Bloomsbury Publishing. Available at: https://www.perlego.com/book/2882809/plays-from-romania-dramaturgies-of-subversion-lowlands-the-spectator-sentenced-to-death-the-passport-stories-of-the-body-artemisia-eva-lina-teresa-the-man-who-had-all-his-malice-removed-sexodrome-pdf (Accessed: 15 October 2022).

MLA 7 Citation

Panainte, Mihaela et al. Plays from Romania: Dramaturgies of Subversion. 1st ed. Bloomsbury Publishing, 2021. Web. 15 Oct. 2022.