Current Affairs Inside of Vysehrad ramparts unusual venue for summer theatre production
The outdoor Summer Shakespeare Festival at Prague Castle has been a great success in recent years. However, it is not the only such seasonal theatrical experience available to audiences in the city; Prague's Vysehrad, one of the most important locations in the history of the Czech nation, has recently being playing host to its own summer theatre project called Faust in Gorlice. Dita Salavova has more.
Photo: Jan Dvorak, www.faust-vysehrad.cz
In 2001, the group Divadelni spolecnost Faust premiered Christopher
Marlow's Doctor Faustus at the Vysehrad casemates. The successful
production ran for five years and saw 150 performances. That ensemble's
achievements have been built on by the group Artes Liberales, which this
year put on a production of Goethe's Faust. Production manager Petra
Kocmanova talks about their approach to the popular German legend.
Photo: Jan Dvorak, www.faust-vysehrad.cz
"We decided not to take the author as a link, but rather the hero of
the drama. There are many plays that were written about Faust, and I don't
mean the translations of Goethe's Faust, but there are also a lot of
nowadays plays that we would like to play probably next year. So the
system is that every year we would like to come up with a new project and
keep the old one, so the festival would grow, and at the end we would have
five Fausts here in one building."
Vysehrad casemates, photo: CzechTourism
The performances take place in the Gorlice hall, which is part of
Vysehrad's casemates. Casemates are passages within fortress ramparts,
originally constructed to serve as hidden mustering points for troops, and
the Gorlice hall served as a vegetable store for Prague. Since the
temperature in the casemates is a constant 16 degrees Celsius, it provides
optimal conditions for preserving historical works of art. Thus, since
1992, it has housed some of the original statues from Charles Bridge.
"It is very hard to work here as we are used to work in a normal theatre, and not to damage anything. We are in a very special room, and that is connected with everything. With the way we behave here, with the way we do the scenography here, with music because even loud music is not good for the statues. We cannot seat here 200 people because by the people's breathing, the air would warm up, and the statues would not be happy. So, it is a very complicated space, but it is beautiful."
Photo: Jan Dvorak, www.faust-vysehrad.cz
What is ideal for the unique statues, though, might not be the right
conditions for human bodies. Those who did not follow the instructions on
the website of Faust in Gorlice and arrived in summer evening clothing
probably had a hard time enjoying the performance. Petra Kocmanova again.
Photo: Jan Dvorak, www.faust-vysehrad.cz
"The actors were working here sometimes for six hours a day in this
cold. A lot of them are almost naked. One of them was so fed up with it
that he went one day to a second hand shop, and he brought for all of them
old skiing outfits. Another thing that saved their health was I think vodka
42, which was a gift from one of the people who support us."
After a slow start, the Faust in Gorlice project gradually drew bigger audiences and enjoyed sell-outs in the second half of its run. This year's production came to an end on Tuesday night.







