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WSWS : Arts
Review : Theater
Everything about this performance felt right
Chroniclesa lamentation by the Teatre Piesn Kizla
By Kaye Tucker
10 March 2006
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The Polish theatre company Teatr Piesn Kozla, (translated
as The Song of the Goat Theatre Company) recently performed its
award winning production of Chroniclesa lamentation,
as part of the international presentations of this years
Sydney festival.
The outcome of two years of research, Chronicles is
breathtaking in its use of lamentation, to portray
part of the ancient Sumerian epic of Gilgamesh the King, part-man,
part-god, and his search for immortality.
The tradition of lamentation, the expression of sorrow at a
funeral through mourning and wailing, dates back to ancient times,
both in Europe and the Middle East. In some cases, the lamentations
followed a set musical structure. In general, its role was to
retell the life of the person who had died. But through research,
the company found in northern Epiros (the region straddling Greece
and Albania and once the cradle of Ancient Greek drama) a place
where families requested that the wailers embroider the life of
their loved one with semi-mythical events, almost as a type of
theatre.
They also found that the traditional songs in this area were
polyphonic lamentations (individual melodies harmonising together)
and contained a division of voicesthe voice that weaves
or perches, the voice that cuts, the voice that takes or gives
and the drone.
Chroniclesa lamentation is built around this division,
both in its vocal form and its dramatic structure. The protagonist
in each episode acts out the poetry, weaving it from
the singing and music. The divisions of the voices can be seen
to correspond to the dramatic function of each actor-singer. For
example, the weaver and taker can correspond
to the protagonist and antagonist. As production notes explain:
These songs are like the warp on a loom, on which the narration
and pattern of the story emerges (see Teatr
Piesn Kozla http://www.piesnkozla.pl).
The performance began with the actors singing beautiful Albanian
songs while sitting on thrones set in a semi-circle and thus creating
the atmosphere of a sacred gathering. Three women, supported by
the male choir, began a haunting chant in Polish about the deeds
of Gilgamesh, swaying backward and forward and swinging bells
on long strings. The raw, strangely evocative and intensely emotional
performance transports audiences back to ancient times and the
emotional journey of Gilgamesh, his tragic loss of a friend, his
search for an immortal life and his ultimate acceptance of the
finite nature of his life.
The fluidity of the performance was mesmerising. Clearly influenced
by the great Polish avant-garde director Jerzy Grotowski (1933-99),
this was theatre stripped of all the unessentials.
A dimly lit bare stage onto which the actors brought all they
needed for the performance. Minimal light effects, deliberate
use of shadow contrasted with the bright light of an open flame.
Simple furniture carefully arranged and moved about as part of
the piece.
From one scene to another, the actors moved gracefully, singing,
chanting, and moving with incredible agility and precision. They
would transform from type to type, character to character, using
only their body and craft. The actors showed a stunning display
of control and beauty and their precision in movement and song
was superb. Everything in this performance felt right.
But Chronicles was not just about performance; it is
also about human suffering. In fact, the actors warmth toward
the audience and the laments, which in ancient times were seen
to function as a means of coming to terms with death, even a cure
for the grief and pain that accompanies loss, generated a strong
sense of harmony.
Teatr Piesn Kozla, which was founded in 1997 by Grzegorz
Bral and Anna Zubrzycki, has been hailed by many as the most exciting
and innovative of the new theatre movements in Poland. It continues
the long tradition of Polish ensemble theatre work and, through
its dedication to ongoing research in the actors craft and
its vocal and movement techniques has created a unique performance
style.
The company spent its first four years in residence at the
Jerzy Grotowski Centre for Theatre culture Research, in Wroclaw,
Poland but since 2002 it has acquired its own studio spacethe
refectory of a fourteenth century monastery in the heart of Wroclaw.
Teatr Piesn Kozla is an international ensemble company
with members from the UK, Sweden, Norway and France as well as
Poland and draws young performers from all over the world to participate
in its extensive artistic and pedagogical program. It organizes
workshops regularly over the year, teaching its own unique approach
to the actors craft.
Chroniclesa lamentation, is an extraordinary work
and a testament to the detailed research into theatrical forms
and acting technique that underpins all this companys work.
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