| |
World Theatre Day International
Message 2003
Playwright, storyteller, film-maker,
author for radio plays, translator

Photo: Martin Kaufhold
A Message on World Theatre
Day 2003
We keep asking the question: Is the
theatre still relevant to the times? For two thousand years the theatre
has held a mirror up to the world and explained our place in it. Tragedy
has portrayed life as being subject to Fate – Comedy has done this
often enough as well. Human beings are flawed, we make fatal mistakes,
rail against our circumstances, clutch at power, are weak. Deceitful and
naïve, we are happy in our ignorance and sickened by God. I hear people
say that life today is beyond the grasp of the traditional instruments
of the theatre and that it is consequently no longer possible to tell stories.
Instead, different sorts of texts, no dialogues, but rather statements.
No drama. A new kind of human being is beginning to appear on our horizon:
Beings that can be cloned and genetically manipulated according whim and
plan. These new, flawless beings, insofar as they are possible, would have
no need for the theatre as we understand it. They would be unable to comprehend
the conflicts that drive it. But we don't know the future. I think it is
up to us to devote all of the energies and the talents that have been given
to us – by whom we do not know – to protect from this uncertain future
our wicked, beautiful and imperfect present, our irrational dreams and
fruitless exertions. The means at our disposal are rich. Theatre is an
impure art and therein lies its vital power. Unscrupulously, it uses everything
that stands in its way. It is forever betraying its own principles. It
is, of course, not immune to the fashions of the times, it avails itself
of images from other media, sometimes speaking slowly, sometimes quickly.
It stammers and falls silent. It is extravagant and banal, evasive, destroys
stories while creating new ones all the same. I am confident that the theatre
will always be able to fill itself with life – as long as we feel the need
to
show each other what we are and what we are not and what we should be.
Long live the theatre! The theatre is one of humanity's great inventions,
equal to the discovery of the wheel and the taming of fire.
Tankred Dorst
(Translated from German)
You are welcome to use the World Theatre
Day texts and photograph and to circulate them. When you do so, please
include the following mention, and, if you display the material on Internet,
we ask you to add a link to the ITI site on Internet http://www.iti-worldwide.org
« WORLD THEATRE DAY was created in 1961 by the International
Theatre Institute (ITI). World Theatre Day is celebrated annually on the
27th March by ITI Centres and the international theatre community, various
national and international theatre events being organized to mark this
occasion. One of the most important of these is the circulation of the
International Message traditionally written by a theatre personality of
world stature at the invitation of the International Theatre Institute.
»
|