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World Theatre Day International Message 2006
Playwright

A RAY OF
HOPE
Every day should be
considered a World Theatre Day, because throughout the last 20
centuries, the flame of theatre has always burned steadily in some
corner of the world.
The theatre has always been under threat of
extinction, especially with the rise of the cinema, television and now
digital media. Technology invaded the stage and annihilated the human
dimension and an attempt was made to create a plastic theatre, a sort
of painting in movement that replaced the spoken word. Plays were
staged without dialogue, without lights or without actors, using only
dummies and dolls showcased by multiple lighting effects.
Technology tried to turn the theatre
into a firework display or a fairground sideshow.
Now we are witnessing the return of
actors before audiences. Today, we are seeing the return of words to
the stage.
The theatre has renounced mass communication and
recognized its inherent limits ; two beings facing each other,
communicating feelings, emotions, dreams and hopes. Scenic art is
relinquishing story-telling in favor of discussing ideas.
The theatre moves, illuminates, disquiets, disturbs,
lifts the spirit, reveals, provokes and violates conventions. It is a
conversation shared with society. Theatre is the first art to confront
emptiness, shadows and silence to make words, movement, lights and life
surge forth.
Theatre is a living creature that destroys itself as
it is created, but always arises from the ashes. It is a magic
communication in which all people give and receive something that
transforms them.
The theatre reflects humankind’s existential anguish
and unravels the human condition. It is not its creators who
speak through the theatre, but rather the society of the epoch.
The theatre has visible enemies, the lack of
artistic education in childhood that hinders discovering and enjoying
it; the poverty that is invading the world, keeping audiences away, and
the indifference and neglect of governments that should be
promoting it.
Gods and men used to speak to one another on the
stage, but now men speak to other men. Therefore, the theatre must be
grander and better than life itself. Theatre is an act of faith in the
value of a wise word in an insane world. It is a demonstration of faith
in human beings who are responsible for their destiny.
We have to experience the theatre in order to
understand what is happening to us, to transmit the pain and suffering
that is all around us, but also to glimpse a ray of hope in the chaos
and nightmare of our daily lives.
Long live the officiating participants in the rite of theatre! Long
live the theatre!
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.
»
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