Transcripts For DW Arts.21 20240713 : comparemela.com

DW Arts.21 July 13, 2024

A child they have to play perfectly or tell an actor that im not going to give them any lines or tell him what he should do. In the end he might turn out to be the dramatic advisor and not on stage at all times you know. This man never takes a break. You mean lets cut his throat from a song rob rob. Is one of europes most successful and controversial directors he has a Clear Mission he wants to make the world a better place with his art. Always gives his all in theater film and political activism what drives him if he. The city of ghent in belgium is small and yet incredibly lively a remarkable cultural scene has developed here in the shadow of the belgian capital brussels we met neil how at and t. Get to the theater where he is now artistic director. 50 or swiss and known to be a restless spirit and what brought you to get. It this could no longer go back a long way not only get in and ive done a lot of coproductions in brussels over the past 1015 years there are many minorities here if you cant compare it with a german city at all theres another audience theres more access to a Cosmopolitan Society and at the same time its a tradition of mixing john rose and theater here the show was mixed to us many artists have been combining dance Performance Film and theatre from the start. But when i arrived and said i needed a lamb and 2 dogs and a jihad is that they all said ok well get that for you. In germany and they would have said youre crazy youve got to work with their ensemble and thats a bunch of old white men. Especially the most men dont know how the 1st piece is artistic director at and t. Get paid all marched against famous altarpiece and the citys residents he didnt just put lambs on stage but amateur Actors Children migrant seniors he want to create cosmopolitan theatre but he doesnt only want to direct place. But i really like it and im passionate pedantic about it them but then it can become boring and stressful to me more. To be explained in this my heart so im glad when i can travel and do something that automatically makes sense to seen me dont ill have spent a lot of time in africa in. Hate radio he examined the 994. 00 genocide in rwanda specifically the role of the radio r t l m which broadcast racist propaganda during the massacres. Up to 1000000 people are estimated to have been killed most of them tutsis most of the killers were hutus. Survivors of the genocide played the radio hosts in the production. Venue and. Continues to work on projects in and about africa. Looked to for lunch from the u. K. When i worked in that region by chance 1st in rwanda and then i went to eastern congo and saw that all the problems the crises the genocide had been exported because so many people had fled to eastern congo and there was instability in the state collapsed before not the. Many companies exploited the fact that it was a failed state. They saw i think it just ripe someone and mine is going to hold target and there are huge deposits there and its the war is still ongoing one thing thats always for the creek if you. Remember. Right. So i thought lets set up a tribunal to examine the situation with the set up an International Court of people so weve got judges from the hague where theres an International Criminal court and from congo mixing different Legal Systems and we took 3 cases involving companies so that we could create a space to make such trials possible. If its really you know. Produce a few because of the desire. The symbolic tribunal and the film were a way of encouraging democracy in congo. And as weve done. When we toured through the mining towns to show the film 2 years later this is people said that what was happening was terrible but they said they would stop voting if there wasnt any change and there would be a revolution and thats what we saw in east germany when everyone said thats enough this is enough and its been time to you want your theater to have an impact on reality and that happened in congo as a result of the tribunals didnt get. The consequence because it was just so i mean the impact was that 2 ministers were fired from the provinces we had worked in the mining minister and the interior minister. But ive always thought that it was obvious that they were completely incompetent and corrupt and even criminals. My hope is always that the Political Class in the Business Elite should have to justify themselves in front of an institution most of the stuff thats the ultimate goal. Because this is the this is the this and. He does one project a year in a crisis zone with his theater in 2019 he went with some actors to mosul and iraq to stage a modern day oresteia the trilogy of ancient greek tragedies by escalus. Those who focus on not miss there is no theater there we found a kind of Fine Art Academy for us but 1st the city was conquered by the americans then by al qaeda and then occupied by us as the capital of the i s caliph it all art forms were banned and artists were executed if they didnt renounce their art i couldnt slow europe the poor so whites in the complaint that. It was not an easy project the iraqis had very Little Theatre experience and they were not allowed to go abroad as had originally been planned so how filmed them in iraq and projected the scenes onto the stage during the performances in belgium theres. Ringback also fit. Into the v. C. If you start to like. This over. d and age and greek tragedy about murder and revenge within a royal family transposed to contemporary iraq. Its a country which knows all about murder and revenge once again me though how explored how victims and perpetrators can continue to live together. What can be done about the fighters of the socalled Islamic State prevent. For retribution. The and. Im glad he asked the iraqi actors what they thought should be done. To them then you just go off and believe you know the model i dont think. Its. The money its going to stick around don. Lemon and some of their money might be what you know might come out of the meeting. Come on. A minute. When asked again they answer differently. Than about its been another fake expected theyd all vote for forgiveness but they all abstained. They said its and we couldnt even kill a chicken because so how could we vote to put someone to death yet if we forgive them weve abolished justice and thats why my hope still lies with the institutions and if its a justice can exist so people say i cant kill the guy but i dont want him to go free so ill hand him over to a judiciary i trust you know but when there isnt any like in iraq and you see what do you do then when theres nice guys to be of course most of them. Blame me in the low house staging the character orestes is gay a taboo subject in a predominantly Muslim Country like iraq. This kiss between 2 men caused an uproar at the performance in mosul. Actor johann lace and was there does he think all went too far. He likes to push things further than other people and i think thats what should do and thats what we what we should do make people think make people think about lives and about our life together and thats what he does so hes maybe provocative and maybe goes a bit too fossum times but i think its ok i think its better than the opposite you know go straight there with. The iraqi performers also push things to their limits and beyond what does a project like this do for localism point act its long been lauded fault as a vicar and some do as we were leaving people said that was cool to go on this for the 1st time in 20 years a large group came here to do an art project and not to conquer the city so arrestees im also is a Success Story once and bush unesco watching the film. The secretary general said you must advise us theyre going to take that shows how little contact the rest when they ask us weve only been there twice they should support one of the up on. The streets and can its hard they would if i was just named consultant director of the film and Theater Department of the revive the spirit of mosul programs and. Im going to build a theater there and do an exchange with 3 border countries germany and belgium and maybe france put it on a solid footing if its the millions are flowing into the feast thats what you want in this are you really a political activist in charge the activist. I mean its interesting time and again when im doing rehearsals like now i realize. Thats really work to go to be on the ball when youre involved in activism you kind of just get carried along. By not to be sweetness when i think your activism isnt for me if youre theater work isnt either fun as its unfolding but it was really nice in italy. Because i shoot a g. s a scene in costume and then take part in some demonstration. To. Be among the 1st to look cool. Oh yeah there you know those shots of latest film the new gospel in my tara in southern italy she says that most of the apostles are african immigrants and refugees some are christian others muslim. People living around the terra often in camps are makeshift settlements. But this is not a historical film its a sad story from our times calls jesus is a social revolutionary fighting for the disenfranchised. And. Thats. What it. Really. C is to call you religious. Im an atheist and i dont believe in god and i never have not even as a child and not through these rooms and of course when you deal with it youre impressed by the power in the complexity of the bible. And then you understand why this book this faith still survives because theres Something Different about it. I mean the desire for basic humanity thats fundamental solidarity and dignity. Especially take for example how absurd it is that jesus surrounds himself with the lowest members of society in a bid to seize power so that he could have set up better associations and he didnt train a fighter so like they didnt islam they trained fighters built an army on the cheap power ok to me and then i was all about this but jesus also preaches complete nonviolence as though hes also a crazy guy who goes around shouting acts ruthlessly when he cant take any criticism and in the end hes done in by his own people he could play them and then you might say its because they cant take any more of him. And i found all of these points really impressive and. Punished with the mind and the fans on the one hand and the film shows stations in jesuss life but on the other there is this revolt had downloaded me to this revolt of dignity on real demonstrations by migrants is it whats the situation like for migrants there and what problems did you have recruiting people in these camps. You know. I travelled there and realised that this lovely little city which has doubled for jerusalem in many films is ironically surrounded by refugee camps. Theyre full of people who are thanks to the dublin regulation are stuck there. Theyre exploited on the huge tomato and orange plantations until they die or i dont know if disappear towards me. So they have. Or go away either if theyre prisoners in italy they whitelist illegal. Just the kind of people jesus spoke up for. The boundaries between reality and fiction blur. Performers are fighting for better working and Living Conditions in real life they will personally experienced exploitation as field hands who have no right. Now theyre revolting against the mafia and Big Companies who profit from their labor. Day places where people no longer have to work for the mafia but on their own plantations for example. Weve tried to remind people that a legal basis exists that its a scandal these laws arent enforced and tried to help them and forced them like it says in the bible i didnt come to destroy the law but to fulfill it to fully and. Migrants from the camps around the terror i had come for the big rally theyre preparing for the revolt. Initiated by the actors jesus and his disciples. The. Local people also demonstrate solidarity with their demands for a right of residence and an end to the exploitation of this protest will also become part of the new gospel. To both the us theater director and a University Lecturer and youre bringing out a book series that are always doing 234 things at once are you a workaholic. Yeah yeah yeah i was always that way makes the ive always like to work a lot because its my way of coming into contact with people is my know if i just worked like crazy and i dont know maybe produced 500 Machine Parts and not just 50 then id be a workaholic and i wouldnt really find that acceptable in from washington i can hear stand on the invasion got a hold of this incidentally i are an astonishingly little for the show if i count the hours ive worked and still work every day that its not worth it at all. The new. Type incurred a mountain of debt is through all of my projects which were always completely underfunded and always caused tax chaos that went to live or die and you name it. Could leave with the i found it companies which then collapsed somehow. All that just so i can work a lot its pretty contradictory this nor the me to shoot a habit and come this. There are also a father is there any time left for your family. For you to be nick would be me far too little because i have a screensaver of my daughters and often when i look at it i think that the most important thing. This mystics there was a few words i feel that the most important from them but i do miss a lot of the same times im working in ghent and i live in cologne which are pretty close. So i try to be home for 2 or 3 days each week thats why i often do rehearsals and conduct meetings in cologne. Because of my family people always have to come to cologne to meet me and i try to spend as much time there as possible if the mood for something. Though maybe theyre glad not to have such a go getter of a father around all week. Yeah. Thats true with my family just like with my coworkers here who also dont see me all the time was a Positive Side to it. Then youre really glad to see one another really communicating theres not such a torturous routine to it. Routine has to be the last thing most people would associate with me though hes positively brimming with energy and extraordinary ideas about that bulis network hes always curious and not afraid of getting involved in things but hes also someone who knows no boundaries someone whos constantly challenging himself. And those who work with him. Actress was seen a lot he has collaborated with on several successful productions currently theyre preparing a new piece about disenfranchised people in brazil. And. Weve been in contact about this project for over a year. And the direction frequently changes radically since ive grown used to it and now i think its wonderful he was brings disorder into order also into the order of the theater business and thats his great strength though its stressful too but mainly its the strength. In compassion the history of the machine gun was you know lardy plays an ngo worker who finds herself confronted with her own limits and prejudices. But. Here. I think that you keep on tackling highly charged topics but also shun the usual theatrical effects or big emotions and outbursts on stage your performers act more like witnesses so do you make it hard on the viewer as a. Car that was in my theater but then im not german people dont go around screaming mice and then but then they dont in most countries luckily its only that way in german regional theater. Thats always put me off the wire these people shouting at me how can i get close to them when theyre busy showing me theyve taken an elocution course. The numbers are pretty major and another thing thats always interested me is listening to someone who. Listening to a story produces something in me and this is one of the quieter effects of theater and the things that you know we can effect of just. This is the way stage 5 easy pieces a play about belgian child molester and murderer mark to took most of the roles including that of to true action by the children to emphasize the power relationship between adults and children. Have always asked myself why isnt this power relationship visible on stage and when this case arose i thought i must use the trickle methods to show what it really is. Kidnapped the children but basically he told them stories to control them and to get them to do things that they really didnt want to do but did all the same. And in my playing we see an adult director getting children to cry and undress and do things they actually dont want to do suddenly and this is the really uncomfortable part of the you understand how that really works when we. See you know. Oh oh oh. 5 easy pieces proved very controversial it was praised by International Critics yet performances were banned in some places. Is handling such dark material too much to expect of children will they be traumatised by the experience. What does it do to them to portray a child murderer or to play the role of the victim or the desperate parents. Lets get to those those 2 you dont consider that animals and children are always authentic. I mean simply rehearsed with the children until they played all of these roles completely professionally employing different methods and all the while observing how the audience broke into tears and even split now would i think about the only people who werent traumatized at all were the children when this when you thought i found that cool somehow it is because theres kind of a liberation in the portrayal of not being free its often that way in theater and. Then the my basically you overcome trauma by going through it what are you working on now. And. I mean editing my jesus film the new gospel and doing a play called family this is what we can from you can be in it i ask a family to recount the story of another family who killed themselves for reasons that remain completely unknown to this day and at the same time to understand why things like this happen. So youre dissecting evil. Yes i always have. Were going. To. Be the 1st. To. A city in ruins. Symbol of a long complex in the philippines between the muslim and the christian population. When i asked fighters from behind the city president to target. His response was. This is not the kind of freedom that we want the philippines in the sights of ins. In 15 minutes on d. W. Good shape. Most people have a lot to look forward to. Thats when youre diagnosed with cancer ever since the whole. Dr carsten like good job talks to young people who are fighting back. And will learn about the latest developments in Clear Mission<\/a> he wants to make the world a better place with his art. Always gives his all in theater film and political activism what drives him if he. The city of ghent in belgium is small and yet incredibly lively a remarkable cultural scene has developed here in the shadow of the belgian capital brussels we met neil how at and t. Get to the theater where he is now artistic director. 50 or swiss and known to be a restless spirit and what brought you to get. It this could no longer go back a long way not only get in and ive done a lot of coproductions in brussels over the past 1015 years there are many minorities here if you cant compare it with a german city at all theres another audience theres more access to a Cosmopolitan Society<\/a> and at the same time its a tradition of mixing john rose and theater here the show was mixed to us many artists have been combining dance Performance Film<\/a> and theatre from the start. But when i arrived and said i needed a lamb and 2 dogs and a jihad is that they all said ok well get that for you. In germany and they would have said youre crazy youve got to work with their ensemble and thats a bunch of old white men. Especially the most men dont know how the 1st piece is artistic director at and t. Get paid all marched against famous altarpiece and the citys residents he didnt just put lambs on stage but amateur Actors Children<\/a> migrant seniors he want to create cosmopolitan theatre but he doesnt only want to direct place. But i really like it and im passionate pedantic about it them but then it can become boring and stressful to me more. To be explained in this my heart so im glad when i can travel and do something that automatically makes sense to seen me dont ill have spent a lot of time in africa in. Hate radio he examined the 994. 00 genocide in rwanda specifically the role of the radio r t l m which broadcast racist propaganda during the massacres. Up to 1000000 people are estimated to have been killed most of them tutsis most of the killers were hutus. Survivors of the genocide played the radio hosts in the production. Venue and. Continues to work on projects in and about africa. Looked to for lunch from the u. K. When i worked in that region by chance 1st in rwanda and then i went to eastern congo and saw that all the problems the crises the genocide had been exported because so many people had fled to eastern congo and there was instability in the state collapsed before not the. Many companies exploited the fact that it was a failed state. They saw i think it just ripe someone and mine is going to hold target and there are huge deposits there and its the war is still ongoing one thing thats always for the creek if you. Remember. Right. So i thought lets set up a tribunal to examine the situation with the set up an International Court<\/a> of people so weve got judges from the hague where theres an International Criminal<\/a> court and from congo mixing different Legal Systems<\/a> and we took 3 cases involving companies so that we could create a space to make such trials possible. If its really you know. Produce a few because of the desire. The symbolic tribunal and the film were a way of encouraging democracy in congo. And as weve done. When we toured through the mining towns to show the film 2 years later this is people said that what was happening was terrible but they said they would stop voting if there wasnt any change and there would be a revolution and thats what we saw in east germany when everyone said thats enough this is enough and its been time to you want your theater to have an impact on reality and that happened in congo as a result of the tribunals didnt get. The consequence because it was just so i mean the impact was that 2 ministers were fired from the provinces we had worked in the mining minister and the interior minister. But ive always thought that it was obvious that they were completely incompetent and corrupt and even criminals. My hope is always that the Political Class<\/a> in the Business Elite<\/a> should have to justify themselves in front of an institution most of the stuff thats the ultimate goal. Because this is the this is the this and. He does one project a year in a crisis zone with his theater in 2019 he went with some actors to mosul and iraq to stage a modern day oresteia the trilogy of ancient greek tragedies by escalus. Those who focus on not miss there is no theater there we found a kind of Fine Art Academy<\/a> for us but 1st the city was conquered by the americans then by al qaeda and then occupied by us as the capital of the i s caliph it all art forms were banned and artists were executed if they didnt renounce their art i couldnt slow europe the poor so whites in the complaint that. It was not an easy project the iraqis had very Little Theatre<\/a> experience and they were not allowed to go abroad as had originally been planned so how filmed them in iraq and projected the scenes onto the stage during the performances in belgium theres. Ringback also fit. Into the v. C. If you start to like. This over. d and age and greek tragedy about murder and revenge within a royal family transposed to contemporary iraq. Its a country which knows all about murder and revenge once again me though how explored how victims and perpetrators can continue to live together. What can be done about the fighters of the socalled Islamic State<\/a> prevent. For retribution. The and. Im glad he asked the iraqi actors what they thought should be done. To them then you just go off and believe you know the model i dont think. Its. The money its going to stick around don. Lemon and some of their money might be what you know might come out of the meeting. Come on. A minute. When asked again they answer differently. Than about its been another fake expected theyd all vote for forgiveness but they all abstained. They said its and we couldnt even kill a chicken because so how could we vote to put someone to death yet if we forgive them weve abolished justice and thats why my hope still lies with the institutions and if its a justice can exist so people say i cant kill the guy but i dont want him to go free so ill hand him over to a judiciary i trust you know but when there isnt any like in iraq and you see what do you do then when theres nice guys to be of course most of them. Blame me in the low house staging the character orestes is gay a taboo subject in a predominantly Muslim Country<\/a> like iraq. This kiss between 2 men caused an uproar at the performance in mosul. Actor johann lace and was there does he think all went too far. He likes to push things further than other people and i think thats what should do and thats what we what we should do make people think make people think about lives and about our life together and thats what he does so hes maybe provocative and maybe goes a bit too fossum times but i think its ok i think its better than the opposite you know go straight there with. The iraqi performers also push things to their limits and beyond what does a project like this do for localism point act its long been lauded fault as a vicar and some do as we were leaving people said that was cool to go on this for the 1st time in 20 years a large group came here to do an art project and not to conquer the city so arrestees im also is a Success Story<\/a> once and bush unesco watching the film. The secretary general said you must advise us theyre going to take that shows how little contact the rest when they ask us weve only been there twice they should support one of the up on. The streets and can its hard they would if i was just named consultant director of the film and Theater Department<\/a> of the revive the spirit of mosul programs and. Im going to build a theater there and do an exchange with 3 border countries germany and belgium and maybe france put it on a solid footing if its the millions are flowing into the feast thats what you want in this are you really a political activist in charge the activist. I mean its interesting time and again when im doing rehearsals like now i realize. Thats really work to go to be on the ball when youre involved in activism you kind of just get carried along. By not to be sweetness when i think your activism isnt for me if youre theater work isnt either fun as its unfolding but it was really nice in italy. Because i shoot a g. s a scene in costume and then take part in some demonstration. To. Be among the 1st to look cool. Oh yeah there you know those shots of latest film the new gospel in my tara in southern italy she says that most of the apostles are african immigrants and refugees some are christian others muslim. People living around the terra often in camps are makeshift settlements. But this is not a historical film its a sad story from our times calls jesus is a social revolutionary fighting for the disenfranchised. And. Thats. What it. Really. C is to call you religious. Im an atheist and i dont believe in god and i never have not even as a child and not through these rooms and of course when you deal with it youre impressed by the power in the complexity of the bible. And then you understand why this book this faith still survives because theres Something Different<\/a> about it. I mean the desire for basic humanity thats fundamental solidarity and dignity. Especially take for example how absurd it is that jesus surrounds himself with the lowest members of society in a bid to seize power so that he could have set up better associations and he didnt train a fighter so like they didnt islam they trained fighters built an army on the cheap power ok to me and then i was all about this but jesus also preaches complete nonviolence as though hes also a crazy guy who goes around shouting acts ruthlessly when he cant take any criticism and in the end hes done in by his own people he could play them and then you might say its because they cant take any more of him. And i found all of these points really impressive and. Punished with the mind and the fans on the one hand and the film shows stations in jesuss life but on the other there is this revolt had downloaded me to this revolt of dignity on real demonstrations by migrants is it whats the situation like for migrants there and what problems did you have recruiting people in these camps. You know. I travelled there and realised that this lovely little city which has doubled for jerusalem in many films is ironically surrounded by refugee camps. Theyre full of people who are thanks to the dublin regulation are stuck there. Theyre exploited on the huge tomato and orange plantations until they die or i dont know if disappear towards me. So they have. Or go away either if theyre prisoners in italy they whitelist illegal. Just the kind of people jesus spoke up for. The boundaries between reality and fiction blur. Performers are fighting for better working and Living Conditions<\/a> in real life they will personally experienced exploitation as field hands who have no right. Now theyre revolting against the mafia and Big Companies<\/a> who profit from their labor. Day places where people no longer have to work for the mafia but on their own plantations for example. Weve tried to remind people that a legal basis exists that its a scandal these laws arent enforced and tried to help them and forced them like it says in the bible i didnt come to destroy the law but to fulfill it to fully and. Migrants from the camps around the terror i had come for the big rally theyre preparing for the revolt. Initiated by the actors jesus and his disciples. The. Local people also demonstrate solidarity with their demands for a right of residence and an end to the exploitation of this protest will also become part of the new gospel. To both the us theater director and a University Lecturer<\/a> and youre bringing out a book series that are always doing 234 things at once are you a workaholic. Yeah yeah yeah i was always that way makes the ive always like to work a lot because its my way of coming into contact with people is my know if i just worked like crazy and i dont know maybe produced 500 Machine Parts<\/a> and not just 50 then id be a workaholic and i wouldnt really find that acceptable in from washington i can hear stand on the invasion got a hold of this incidentally i are an astonishingly little for the show if i count the hours ive worked and still work every day that its not worth it at all. The new. Type incurred a mountain of debt is through all of my projects which were always completely underfunded and always caused tax chaos that went to live or die and you name it. Could leave with the i found it companies which then collapsed somehow. All that just so i can work a lot its pretty contradictory this nor the me to shoot a habit and come this. There are also a father is there any time left for your family. For you to be nick would be me far too little because i have a screensaver of my daughters and often when i look at it i think that the most important thing. This mystics there was a few words i feel that the most important from them but i do miss a lot of the same times im working in ghent and i live in cologne which are pretty close. So i try to be home for 2 or 3 days each week thats why i often do rehearsals and conduct meetings in cologne. Because of my family people always have to come to cologne to meet me and i try to spend as much time there as possible if the mood for something. Though maybe theyre glad not to have such a go getter of a father around all week. Yeah. Thats true with my family just like with my coworkers here who also dont see me all the time was a Positive Side<\/a> to it. Then youre really glad to see one another really communicating theres not such a torturous routine to it. Routine has to be the last thing most people would associate with me though hes positively brimming with energy and extraordinary ideas about that bulis network hes always curious and not afraid of getting involved in things but hes also someone who knows no boundaries someone whos constantly challenging himself. And those who work with him. Actress was seen a lot he has collaborated with on several successful productions currently theyre preparing a new piece about disenfranchised people in brazil. And. Weve been in contact about this project for over a year. And the direction frequently changes radically since ive grown used to it and now i think its wonderful he was brings disorder into order also into the order of the theater business and thats his great strength though its stressful too but mainly its the strength. In compassion the history of the machine gun was you know lardy plays an ngo worker who finds herself confronted with her own limits and prejudices. But. Here. I think that you keep on tackling highly charged topics but also shun the usual theatrical effects or big emotions and outbursts on stage your performers act more like witnesses so do you make it hard on the viewer as a. Car that was in my theater but then im not german people dont go around screaming mice and then but then they dont in most countries luckily its only that way in german regional theater. Thats always put me off the wire these people shouting at me how can i get close to them when theyre busy showing me theyve taken an elocution course. The numbers are pretty major and another thing thats always interested me is listening to someone who. Listening to a story produces something in me and this is one of the quieter effects of theater and the things that you know we can effect of just. This is the way stage 5 easy pieces a play about belgian child molester and murderer mark to took most of the roles including that of to true action by the children to emphasize the power relationship between adults and children. Have always asked myself why isnt this power relationship visible on stage and when this case arose i thought i must use the trickle methods to show what it really is. Kidnapped the children but basically he told them stories to control them and to get them to do things that they really didnt want to do but did all the same. And in my playing we see an adult director getting children to cry and undress and do things they actually dont want to do suddenly and this is the really uncomfortable part of the you understand how that really works when we. See you know. Oh oh oh. 5 easy pieces proved very controversial it was praised by International Critics<\/a> yet performances were banned in some places. Is handling such dark material too much to expect of children will they be traumatised by the experience. What does it do to them to portray a child murderer or to play the role of the victim or the desperate parents. Lets get to those those 2 you dont consider that animals and children are always authentic. I mean simply rehearsed with the children until they played all of these roles completely professionally employing different methods and all the while observing how the audience broke into tears and even split now would i think about the only people who werent traumatized at all were the children when this when you thought i found that cool somehow it is because theres kind of a liberation in the portrayal of not being free its often that way in theater and. Then the my basically you overcome trauma by going through it what are you working on now. And. I mean editing my jesus film the new gospel and doing a play called family this is what we can from you can be in it i ask a family to recount the story of another family who killed themselves for reasons that remain completely unknown to this day and at the same time to understand why things like this happen. So youre dissecting evil. Yes i always have. Were going. To. Be the 1st. To. A city in ruins. Symbol of a long complex in the philippines between the muslim and the christian population. When i asked fighters from behind the city president to target. His response was. This is not the kind of freedom that we want the philippines in the sights of ins. In 15 minutes on d. W. Good shape. Most people have a lot to look forward to. Thats when youre diagnosed with cancer ever since the whole. Dr carsten like good job talks to young people who are fighting back. And will learn about the latest developments in Cancer Treatment<\/a> good shape. In 90 minutes on d w. 2 a symphony. Looks even beethovens Pastoral Symphony<\/a> is the foundation. Of an International Art<\/a> project. Composed their understanding of nature. To mark the 250000 of verse 3 of the composers birth id like sharon programmed by her not you know hes good. Beethoven worldwide pastoral project starts to come forth on d w. Like. My gorgeous love. For the russian soul. So many different walks of life. Some. Awfully 12. Come straight from the heart. The Russian Internet<\/a> churning today starts june 18th d. W. This is indeed if you news live from berlin protesters return to the streets of hong kong. Prodemocracy activists say chinas proposed new security law will bring an end to the territories autonomy will go to beijing for the details also coming up love love muslims around the world to break their fast for the last time of ramadan overshadows the specter of covert 19. In week 2 of the biggest thing is return from a forced break","publisher":{"@type":"Organization","name":"archive.org","logo":{"@type":"ImageObject","width":"800","height":"600","url":"\/\/ia903207.us.archive.org\/6\/items\/DW_20200524_073000_Arts.21\/DW_20200524_073000_Arts.21.thumbs\/DW_20200524_073000_Arts.21_000001.jpg"}},"autauthor":{"@type":"Organization"},"author":{"sameAs":"archive.org","name":"archive.org"}}],"coverageEndTime":"20240716T12:35:10+00:00"}

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