Skip to main content
mobile

L'Harmattan Open Access platform

  • Search
  • OA Collections
  • L'Harmattan Archive
Englishen
  • Françaisfr
  • Deutschde
  • Magyarhu
LoginRegister
  • Volume Overview
  • Page
  • Text
  • Metadata
  • Clipping
Preview
022_000047/0000

Poetic Rituality in Theater and Literature

  • Preview
  • PDF
  • Show Metadata
  • Show Permalink
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)
Series
Collection Károli
Type of publication
tanulmánykötet
022_000047/0259
  • Volume Overview
  • Page
  • Text
  • Metadata
  • Clipping
Page 260 [260]
  • Preview
  • Show Permalink
  • JPG
  • TIFF
  • Prev
  • Next
022_000047/0259

OCR

ANDRÁS VISKY Vasile Sirli has already been auditioning many children invited from the Bela Bartók Elementary Lyceum in Timisoara, searching for the most appropriate childrens voices to make sound recordings of them. And there were several who made their way to the theater as well as working on the text at home, and now they’re dropped from the production. It’s sad but seems somehow unavoidable. An unresolvable contradiction also lurks here: is it precisely the children’s voices, upon which the very concept of our Tragedy is built, that will go missing from the production? My Lord, do not abandon me! Another most weighty dramaturgical justification appears alongside the voice we’ve found: to the extent that the Lord’s voice is a voiceover that the sound engineer provides as the final word, the Lord transforms into a mechanical voice, and thus the child, no matter how fine its singing voice might be, cannot be a part of the production’s present time: the Lord’s personal drama would cease. And another justification, if needed: it seems that the theological content of the Lord’s texts is utterly beyond the children; one can hear how the text detaches from them and sounds alien. This distant poem fails to become their own text, at least not in the time span at our disposal. Singing, of course, would solve this problem, it could become interior. But, well, now this has taken an unexpected turn. Time, always. Theatrical performance is made from the material of time; the infinitely long rehearsal time liquidates theater — this is just one of Brook’s important realizations, as he says in Threads of Time: “nothing can alter the fact that we need an audience.” One must step beyond rehearsals at some point: one must present oneself. The theatrical production can never be finished and perfect, because then it would be inhuman. Becoming mechanical is the death of theater: “the audience is a mirror in which we confront our own inadequacy,” Brook emphasises once more.”! I mention to Purcarete that the idea of transposing the Lord’s words into song had already come up in the 1934 production of the Tragedy in the Burgtheater in Vienna, which amplified the poem’s dramatic emphases. According to Antal Németh’s account, the Lord “does not speak but only sings in a recitativo secco-like manner, which effectively differentiates what he has to say from the angels’ verses, although they could have easily modified stylized speech to the point of pure sung speech.”” 71 Peter Brook: Threads of Time: Reflections, London, Methuen Press, 1998. 72 Koltai: Ibid., 39.

Structural

Custom

Image Metadata

Image width
1830 px
Image height
2834 px
Image resolution
300 px/inch
Original File Size
1.09 MB
Permalink to jpg
022_000047/0259.jpg
Permalink to ocr
022_000047/0259.ocr

Links

  • L'Harmattan Könyvkiadó
  • Open Access Blog
  • Kiadványaink az MTMT-ben
  • Kiadványaink a REAL-ban
  • CrossRef Works
  • ROR ID

Contact

  • L'Harmattan Szerkesztőség
  • Kéziratleadási szabályzat
  • Peer Review Policy
  • Adatvédelmi irányelvek
  • Dokumentumtár
  • KBART lists
  • eduID Belépés

Social media

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn

L'Harmattan Open Access platform

LoginRegister

User login

eduId Login
I forgot my password
  • Search
  • OA Collections
  • L'Harmattan Archive
Englishen
  • Françaisfr
  • Deutschde
  • Magyarhu