|
|
Montownia
| |
| |
SLAWOMIR MROZEK
The Party
|
(Zabawa)
|
|
Adapted and performed by:
|
MONTOWNIA Theatre
|
| |
with: |
Adam Krawczuk
Rafal Rutkowski
Maciej Wierzbicki
|
| |
One-act performance, about 75 minutes long.
|
Directed by:
team-work
Cooperation:
Agnieszka Warchulska, Piotr Ziniewicz
Art protection:
Jaroslaw Gajewski
|
ABOUT THE PLAY (excerpts from the press)
|
"The play by Mrozek - similarly to all the works of the
author, derives from Polish realities, exquisitely known in
Poland - is aiming to generalize problems of all times (..).
In “Zabawa” three farm-hands try to spend free time
in peculiar way - they create some kind of holidays in their
dreams. Unfortunately, they cannot find the announced entertainment
and they haven’t got enough inventiveness for creation
of such an entertainment by themselves. However, their determination
is so strong that two of them decide to sacrifice the third
one. They want him to sacrifice his life for the sake of their
common idea (entertainment). In this case a funeral will be
possible and a funeral banquet - sense of celebration and holiday.
Maybe it is not a typical entertainment. but something real
will occur at least.”
“The Mrozek’s dialogues sound freshly and reliably
and the rate of action is high all the time. Even during the
most grotesque situations one can see no excessive play of actors
nor inclination for solo presentation. The musical interval
performed by the trio of actors (fiddle, accordion and percussion)
should be highly appreciated.”
Janusz R. Kowalczyk - RZECZPOSPOLITA
|
“(...) this one-act play is the masterpiece of a dramatic
construction (...). Satire is rather beside the point, but
some philosophical problems appear."
“The power of the performance (...) consists not so
much in the execution as in the interpretation of Mrozek’s
play, which is very serious and very mature. It is a rare
theatre in our times, it means something. It refers to all
of us."
Wojciech Majcherek - TEATR
|
“Zabawa” (...) combines the perfect
theatrical art of the group with unpretentiousness of the Stage
adaptation.
(...) All the actors are tuning to the same ironical Mrozek’s
melody, giving to it a modern tone. They also know how to find
the accurate balance of gags and to depict the deeper sense
of the play, which is giving Mrozek’s perverse answer
to “Wesele” (“Wedding” by S. Wyspianski).
(...) They use few simplest requisites for that: a table, an
empty bottle and a box for accordion which plays part of a coffin”.
Roman Pawlowski - GAZETA WYBORCZA
|
“I should say that till now nobody found such unusual
rendition of the more than thirty years old one-act play.
Entertainment appears to the heroes as a synonym of the real
life, deprived them by an unknown sentence. When thay arrange
their own substitute of the real life, it can contain wedding,
funeral, hate, dreams and competition...”
Jacek Sieradzki - POLITYKA
|
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
|
Slawomir Mrozek
Mrozek is a playwright, satirist and master of the short story
who was born in Borzecin in 1930 and has lived in Paris, the
USA, Germany and Mexico. Since 1997, he has published cartoons
and columns in Gazeta Wyborcza, the largest Polish daily newspaper.
He is probably the Polish playwright whose works are staged
most often both in Poland and abroad, and for years he has been,
along with Stanislaw Lem, the most popular writer in Poland.
His work has been translated into and staged in more than a
dozen languages.
Mrozek began publishing his cartoons in 1950 and has regularly
published collections of cartoons since 1953. The cartoons and
his satirical short stories brought him early and unusual fame
and a unique place in contemporary Polish letters. He sought
out and satirized both the absurdities of life under communism,
and the banal post-romantic stereotypes of the Polish imagination.
He has become a part of the Polish language: particularly nonsensical
everyday situations are described as "straight out of Mrozek".
People make argumentative points on the basis of his satires.
Mrozek's debut as a playwright came in 1956 with The Police,
which depicted the central role of the "police" -
including the secret police - in a totalitarian state. In order
to convince both the public and their superiors that they are
necessary, Mrozek's police invent an opposition movement in
order to justify their own existence. Mrozek has produced one
success after another. He exploits the grotesque, absurd exaggeration,
satire, and parody with an unerring sense of the comic. At the
same time, he peppers his works with themes that turn them into
parables, morality tales, or philosophical experiments. They
dissect both the oppressive reality of a semi-totalitarian state
like communist Poland and the interhuman relations and games
that people play, usually with the aim of manipulating others.
As one critic has stated, Mrozek specializes in the conflict
among three groups: the intellectuals, who are in fact mere
puppets; the ideologues who consciously shape social reality;
and the unthinking, simple "slobs" who rely on brute
force alone. Usually, the intellectual ends up falling victim
to the slob, who is merely fulfilling the wishes of the ideologue.
I have indeed laughed in all sorts of ways, out loud and silently,
biologically and intellectually, but the laughter has never
penetrated the center of my being. I belong to the generation
for which laughter was always spiced with irony, bitterness
or despair. Ordinary laughter, laughter for the sake of laughing,
cheerful and untroubled, amusing puns - that strikes us as somewhat
old-fashioned and enviable.
[from www.polska2000.pl]

|
|
|