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022_000047/0000

Poetic Rituality in Theater and Literature

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Field of science
Művészetek (művészetek, művészettörténet, előadóművészetek, zene) / Arts (arts, history of arts, performing arts, music) (13039), Vizuális művészetek, előadóművészetek, dizájn / Visual arts, performing arts, design (13046), Irodalomelmélet / Literary theory (13022)
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tanulmánykötet
022_000047/0094
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022_000047/0094

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VALERE NOVARINA AND JANOS PILINSZKY OR THE POETIC THEATER OF UNSELFING RITUAL Nyitott szemmel állt egész éjszaka, He stood all through the night, with wide eyes and on into the morning, when he was s reggel is, mikor agyonverték. beaten to death. In his 1967 interview on Vatican Radio, he stated that his model for the sacral theater is the Mass: "Following the problems posed so pointedly by the theater of the absurd, we must do everything possible for the creation of a new sacral theater [...]. Our age, which displays in high relief the end of a process of profanation, also offers numerous gualities that make possible the birth of a new sacral artform, which I can best imagine as taking some sort of oratorical form. It certainly sounds too bold, but it is in no way an accident that our attention again turns its concentration toward the drama of dramas, the liturgy of the Holy Mass." In motionless observation (“lying flat on the paling, hard asa press”), the poem is heard as if it were silent, as if it were part of the Mass, the liturgy: a prayer for embodiment; a motionless drama. Novarina’s texts, just like Pilinszky’s oratorio and stage works, are indubitably text-centric, but the former can also rely on daily theatrical practice. Pilinszky’s theatrical “pieces,” written in the seventies, draw a great deal on his poetic technique: in truth, he worked out a theatrical poetics and not a theory of the theater. His dramaturgy draws upon Simone Weil’s texts, Grotowski’s, and, most of all, Wilson’s theater. Although his trust in the word occasionally falters (indeed, in the seventies it moves to the sentence or, much more likely, to a sort of deficient mechanism), after nearly falling silent he nevertheless chooses the mediator-actor of immobile intensity Sheryl Sutton (and not the deaf-mute little boy) as the lead player in his dialogue-essay, and in his final notes he speaks of planning a book whose title would have been “He Finally Speaks.”?! Just as with Pilinszky or Wilson, so in Novarina’s works, the actor does not express himself: he is a being divided in two, his own witness, observer of his own Passion — a person who steps outside personhood. In those expressions we arrive at in studying Valére Novarina’s works — the theater of unselfed poetry, the theater’s modern (concealed) liturgy, etc. — we must understand a deep inner compulsion, a teleological longing, rather than Janos Pilinszky: Fable. Detail from KZ-Oratorio, trans. Ted Hughes — Janos Csokits, in Pilinszky: Ibid., 50. (An earlier version in M. Vajda (ed.): Modern Hungarian Poetry, Budapest, Corvina Press, 1977, 149-150.) Janos Pilinszky: Publicisztikai irdsok [Journalistic Writings], Budapest, Osiris, 1999, 526. What we know about the productions achieved during the author’s life is that the first one was presented in Kecskemét in 1963, and also staged in Orléans in 1967. According to the 3rd May 1969 issue of Film, színház, muzsika [Film, Theater, Music], the Universitas Group also staged it, under the direction of Jözsef Ruszt. (Posthumous productions: 1994 at the Castle Theater, Gyula, directed by Istvan Iglédi; 13-15 November 1996 in Paris, jointly by the Théâtre Molière and the Maison de la Poésie, under Michael Lonsdale’s direction.) 2° Pilinszky: Naplôk, tôredékek [Journals, Fragments], 200-201. + 93 +

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