The Selector's Voice
After last year's Festival, which had successfully explored contemporary
plays with the aim of presenting to its audiences works that are (or
attempt at being) important in the Europe and Croatia of today, I thought
it might be interesting to turn to contemporary theatrical performances
based on completely different textual sources being played both at home
and throughout the world. In spite of the frequent prejudice (not entirely
unfounded in our theatres) that dealing with classical plays implies
theatrical antiquity, trends in contemporary theatre prove otherwise.
During the last few years, while visiting leading European and world
theatre festivals, or even when superficially surfing the Internet in
order to read the repertoires of renowned world theatres - be they national
theatres or alternative groups, I have discovered an unexpectedly large
number of classical plays being put on stage. These include authors
that lived a couple of centuries ago as well as those belonging to the
first half of the 20th century that can (and are) today undoubtedly
considered as classics. At the same time, the vitality of those shows,
their modernity and the attraction they evidently have for both contemporary
theatregoers and theatre professionals, have once again incited the
question: "What's Hecuba to us today?" It is precisely following such
guidelines that this year's selection for The Ninth International Small
Scene Theatre Festival has been made.
Not without reason perplexed, Hamlet, concerned for the actor, asks
himself: "What's Hecuba to him or he to Hecuba
That he should weep for her?" All those emotions, all those tears, the
trembling voice - for nothing. For Hecuba. An ancient myth.
What are Euripides, Seneca, Milton, Chekhov, and even Genet and Müller,
to us today? Even Krleža, for some time now, "lives" as anything but
a contemporary playwright.
All these dramatists, and many others, are obviously an incentive for
our saying something about ourselves; they make us stop and think and
search for answers to the numerous questions they had asked once themselves
and their contemporaries. They help us create theatre language relevant
to our own present.
Last year, with ardour and enthusiasm, we followed the paths of theatres
inspired by the lively genre of the latest, most contemporary plays.
This year, let us watch, equally intrigued, how the echo from the deep
well of classic heritage reaches us and our lives and what it has to
tell us. Comparisons can be useful in contemplating the theatre of today,
especially when one searches for answers to questions such as: "What
is contemporary theatre and which are the ways to reach it?" At the
same time, by re-examining that which is old and supposedly universally
known in a completely new manner, we can learn about the past just as
much as about the present.
Let's leave the future to prophets. The theatre is always here and now,
living during the moment it is happening.
For us, the moment is The Ninth International Small Scene Theater Festival
in Rijeka.
Welcome!
Darko Lukić