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NTB to Present Lottery Tickets in Bratislava
Lottery Tickets, the show of the ”I.L. Caragiale” National Theatre, created by director Alexandru Dabija after the eponymous sketch by Caragiale, shall be presented within the second edition of the ”Eurokontext s.k.” International Festival, organised by the National Slovak Theatre (SND) of Bratislava. The NTB show shall be performed on 16th June 2017, in the Grand Hall (Drama Hall) of this theatre from the Slovak capital.
The performers of the show Lottery Tickets to be presented in Bratislava are: Gavril Pătru, Marius Manole, Ana Ciontea, Axel Moustache, as well as the younger Corina Moise, Ilona Brezoianu, Eliza Păuna, Valentina Zaharia, Mădălin Mandin, Daniel Hara, Mihai Munteniță, Eduard Cârlan, Ionuț Toader, Dragoș Dumitru.
Lottery Tickets achieved over time tremendous success, both in Romania and abroad, being appreciated as „a symphonic theatrical gem about the whims of luck”. The show brought director Alexandru Dabija the Best Director Award at the 2013 UNITER Gala and further two distinctions to stage designer Helmut Stürmer: Award for Best Scenography at the UNITER Gala and Award for Scenography at the Romanian Comedy Festival. Moreover, the show has participated in the first edition (2014) of the MITEM Festival („Madach International Theatre Meeting”), organised by the Budapest National Theatre, where it received an excellent welcome.
The Romanian theatrical presence in Bratislava represents, at the same time, a replica to the tour of October 2016, of SND in Bucharest, with the outstanding show The Shepherd’s Wife by Ivan Stodola, diplomatic and cultural event hosted within the framework of the Slovak Presidency to the Council of the European Union. The NTB tour in Bratislava is mentioned even in the Bilateral cooperation programme between the Ministries of Culture of Romania and the Republic of Slovakia, concluded for the time frame 2016-2020.
This year’s edition of the Eurokontext s.k. International Festival, dedicated to Theatre is the occasion to witness some of the best European productions, far from being indifferent to what is currently happening in the world and to us in this world. The year 2016 has been the year of dramatic social evolutions and changes which marked the destinies of many people. The motto ”Civilisation Threatened by Civilisation”, adopted by the current edition of the Festival, is the natural reflection of this context, explain the event organisers: ”Answering this challenge, the theatrical productions of the Festival can present the threats of civilisation both in a grotesque and comic spirit, as well as in a poetic language. Because only Theatre has that inner strength and the magic allowing it to talk about the most difficult topics with a simplicity and creativity which cannot be viable in another environment”.
The theatres participating in the Bratislava Festival feature the famous Vigszinhaz / Comedy Theatre of Budapest (Hungary) with the play Encounter, of famous Hungarian writer Peter Nadas (part of the trilogy Purification, Encounter and Funerals), directed by Eszenyi Enikő and stage design by the excellent Csaba Antal; the Iceland National Theatre – premiering in Slovakia! – with a version of the Shakespearean drama Othello, adaptation and direction Gísli Örn Garðarsson; Stary Teatr / Cracow Old Theatre (Poland) with An Enemy of the People by Ibsen, directed by Jan Klata, one of the most controversial contemporary Polish directors and playwrights, the collective production based on the text Ubu the King of the National Theatre of Slovenia from Ljubljana; the National Theatre of Mannheim (Germany) with the troubling show Turn On /Turn Off, directed by Burkhard Kosminski, on a text inspired by the Fukushima disaster, commissioned in 2012-2013 by a Tokyo theatre to the well-known German author, winner of countless prizes, among others of the prestigious Müllheimer Dramatikerpreis, Ronald Schimmelpfenning.
Beside the international productions listed above, further 10 recent SND productions shall be on view during the Festival (10-20 June 2017).
Translated by Simona Nichiteanu







