Hamlet

Sunday, November 5, 2017, 7:15 PM

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  • Sunday, November 5, 2017, 7:15 PM
  • Tuesday, November 7, 2017, 7:15 PM
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Krzysztof Garbaczewski brilliantly reconciles the oppositions: a faith in the text and its rejection, faith in drama and a conviction of its anachronism, the virtuosic director and the anarchic stage. No other Polish director has such an impressive visual imagination – and Hamlet, with its sets designed by Aleksandra Wasilkowska, is further evidence.

“Hamlet is a spider's web, it center is Elsinore, an alien environment, far from the civilized world, to the which the Prince is desperately trying to give meaning. William Shakespeare molds his work doubting the purpose of revenge. What can vengeance mean when the authority of Hamlet/the Ghost ceases to hold?” the artists ask.

“Krzysztof Garbaczewski brilliantly reconciles the oppositions: a faith in the text and its rejection, faith in drama and a conviction of its anachronism, the virtuosic director and the anarchic stage. No other Polish director has such an impressive visual imagination – and Hamlet, with its sets designed by Aleksandra Wasilkowska, is further evidence. Over the stage hangs an enormous mirror-screen that recalls a rosette – it turns on its axis and casts flashes of light. This play scatters Hamlet like a prism. Out of the maudlin 'to be or not to be' Cecko makes an open-ended 'to be, or not: to be decided.' This is why the subsequent scenes create variants on an idea for Hamlet, separate dense worlds that more stand as neighbors than result from one another,” concluded Witold Mrozek in Gazeta Wyborcza.

Directed by - Krzysztof Garbaczewski
Translation - Stanisław Barańczak
Script - Marcin Cecko, Krzysztof Garbaczewski
Dramaturgy - Marcin Cecko
Set design - Aleksandra Wasilkowska
Video, lighting director - Robert Mleczko, Marek Kozakiewicz
Costumes - Svenja Gassen, Sławomir Blaszewski
Choreographic consultation (butoh dance) - Sylwia Hanff
Stage manager / prompter / assistant director - Hanna Nowak

7.11.2017 - The play will be performed with English surtitles. The text of the improvisation can be found find in the foyer (before the play).

Main Stage

Stary National Theatre

ul. Jagiellońska 1

Stary National Theatre is one of the oldest theatres in Poland. Its contemporary repertoire consists of both contemporary works and reinterpretations of classics.

The theatre, which found its home in a historical building on a corner of Szczepański Square, is one of Poland’s national stages, directly managed by the Minister of Culture. In the 19th century, its stage was graced by the theatre’s current patron, a consummate actress, Helena Modrzejewska, known to the English-speaking world as Modjeska. A great many eminent artists trod the legendary boards of the Stary after the war, notably Tadeusz Kantor, Jerzy Grotowski, Zygmunt Hübner, and Krystian Lupa. The stagings of Adam Mickiewicz’s The Forefathers’ Eve directed by Konrad Swinarski and of Fyodor Dostoyevsky’s The Possessed directed by Andrzej Wajda made history. The contemporary repertoire of the theatre consists both of current works and reinterpretations of classics.

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