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2016 | 64 | 2 | 147 - 164

Article title

NAŠI NAŠI FURIANTI PETRA LÉBLA

Authors

Content

Title variants

EN
Naši Naši Furianti by Petr Lébl

Languages of publication

CS

Abstracts

EN
This study draws on a doctoral thesis dealing with a series of postmodern productions of a Czech naturalist rural drama, which were put on the stage at the turn of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. In 1994 Petr Lébl, a prominent Czech post-modern director, undertook the direction of Ladislav Stroupežnický’s classic Czech realist drama Naši furianti (Our Swagerers) from 1887. A distinct feature of Lébl’s directorial work is visual opulence. Also in this case, he packed the small stage of the Divadlo Na zábradlí theatre with dozens of actors and a large number of props, mixing elements of Czech, Spanish, Jewish and other national folklores in a pell-mell manner. In order to point out how devoid of any real substance national symbols are, he presented his characters in the style of Czech fairy tales – the just shoemaker Habršperk as a devil, the deceitful tailor Fiala as a water goblin and the brave army veteran Bláha as the Knight of Blaník. In addition, the role of the village teacher was performed by a black person, and a blind person played the part of a village scribe and law expert. Lébl thus took an ironic stance towards the tradition of realist staging of Stroupežnický’s drama by the National Theatre and indirectly commented on the chaos in values that had set in after the fall of the communist totalitarian rule in 1989 and with the onset of market economy practices, unrestrained by moral considerations, in Czech society.

Keywords

Year

Volume

64

Issue

2

Pages

147 - 164

Physical description

Contributors

author
  • Divadelní fakulta Akademie múzických umění v Praze, Czech Republic

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.cejsh-693cdd2d-1b05-4d27-8f32-80ab1b26718a
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