News
The Chekhovian Seagull, directed by Eugen Jebeleanu, breaks the monopoly of theatrical clichés
The “I.L. Caragiale” National Theater announces the premiere of a new performance on the stage of Ion Caramitru Hall, The Seagull by A.P. Chekhov, translated by Raluca Rădulescu, on May 14 and 15, 2022, from 7.30 pm.
One of the most famous Chekhovian plays in Romania (over 30 stagings in the last decades) and in the world, The Seagull is approached in a fresh, challenging vision and carefully connected to today's realities by one of the strongest voices of the new generation of creators, Eugen Jebeleanu. He proposes a theater of "turmoils and vulnerabilities", a mixture of passion, cruelty, desperation to live - in short, a contemporary, surprising vision of a famous classic play.
The Seagull is a show that puts on display the backstage of the theater, the conflicts between generations in the confrontation of ideas and theatricalities that shakes the beliefs and stereotyped clichés of the representation of people on stage”, states Eugen Jebeleanu.
Eugen Jebeleanu, artistic director of the 28 & Cie des Ogres Company from France, theater and opera director, and lately even film director, recently awarded at the Gopo Gala for “best debut film”: Poppy Field (a 2020 production, also awarded at TIFF, in 2021, for Best Director), is a graduate of UNATC (specialization in acting), and has a Master of Directing and Dramaturgy in Paris.
In 2010, together with the playwright Yann Verburgh, he founded “Company 28”, and later “Cie des Ogres” in 2017, collaborating in the recent years with the most important theaters in the country, including those in Sibiu. He also directed many shows performed in France and Germany. In 2017, he directed the play Ogres, a project that was awarded by the Fédération d’Associations de Théâtre Populaire (FATP). For the show Itinerary. One day, the world will change directed in 2019 he received the award for best director at the UNITER Awards Gala. He collaborated with the Opera House from Lyon for the play I Was Looking at the Ceiling and Then I Saw the Sky, by John Adams.
Niko Becker, Irina Movilă, Alexandru Potocean, Sara Cuncea / Eva Cosac, Ada Galeș, Ciprian Nicula / Emilian Mârnea, Istvan Teglas, Emilian Oprea, Richard Bovnoczki, Florentina Țilea are the actors chosen by the director to give voice to the questions that trouble us spectators and artists alike today: “What need does the theater find in the tragic context of a war? What kind of theater represents us today? Where does the artist's discourse meet that of the citizen? What can be our manifesto today on a text written more than 100 years ago? How is fiction made and how do we transform the world by shaking up theater?”
An exceptional cast, joined by the set designer Velica Panduru, the image director Marius Panduru and the musician Rémi Billardon, offer an immersive experience in a hypnotic theatrical reality, augmented by video projections and music, with a few scenes performed in foreign languages (but with Romanian subtitles), with moments of frantic rhythm.
A show not recommended for children under the age of 16: scenes that can affect them emotionally, scenes with sexual connotations and nudity.
“I am guilty! I lost sight of the fact that only a few chosen people can write and act on stage. And I broke the monopoly.” These words, belonging to the main character, Treplev, reflect the perspective of the director's conception and the reading filter of this staging on the Chekhov text.
We invite you to visit the Calendar section on the TNB website to see the schedule of the following performances and do not miss this new show of the National Theater from Bucharest.
Translated by Andreea Codrea-Boeriu







