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World Theatre Day 2021: Message by Helen Mirren
27 March marks World Theatre Day, the annual worldwide celebration of theatre. The council of the International Theatre Institute selected stage, screen and television actress Helen Mirren to write the World Theatre Day Message for 2021.
Helen Mirren is a one of the best known and most respected actresses with an international career that spans stage, screen and television and has won many awards for her powerful and versatile performances, including the Academy Award in 2007 for her performance in 'The Queen'.
World Theatre Day Message 2021 by Helen Mirren
“This has been such a very difficult time for live performance and many artists, technicians and craftsmen and women have struggled in a profession that is already fraught with insecurity.
Maybe that always present insecurity has made them more able to survive this pandemic with wit and courage.
Their imagination has already translated itself, in these new circumstances, into inventive, entertaining and moving ways to communicate, thanks of course in large part to the internet.
Human beings have told each other stories for as long as they have been on the planet. The beautiful culture of theatre will live for as long as we stay here.
The creative urge of writers, designers, dancers, singers, actors, musicians, directors, will never be suffocated and in the very near future will flourish again with a new energy and a new understanding of the world we all share.
I can’t wait!”
Ion Caramitru: Theatre as seen from the prompter’s booth
Throughout the universal history of theatre, events have occurred that have sent it into a slumber: epidemics, pandemics, wars, governments of a particular bigotry, dictators.
Come to think of it, most of the time these syncopations did not bring it to its knees, but strengthened it, gave it more reasons to survive and then to reappear more alive and stronger.
A prisoner of the conjuncture, the theatre escapes from its escort and finds its freedom in respect for the word and love for the audience.
Where should theatre be sought when it is forbidden? What happens to it when it is abandoned? Who preserves it for better times? Is it not the beneficiaries of the acting school, the living wearers of the standard characters? Is it not the actors? Is it not their hope of being watched? Hunted or flattered? Reservists or protesters?
Enter the empty stage and open the prompter’s booth. The text is there. The prompter is waiting. The incendiary speech. All that is missing is a spark and the will to end the indifference.
Theatre offers lessons in diction, attitude, respect for the spoken word, civility.
In fact, what I am trying to say here is a call for calm, for study, for patience.
Have faith in us, theatre people who, together with a loyal audience, ensure the permanence of an island of freedom, a secular shrine of self-knowledge.
Happy Birthday, in good health!
Ion Caramitru
President of UNITER / Romanian ITI Centre
Translated by Simona Nichiteanu







