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PQ 2003 JURY FINAL PROTOCOL By André Perinetti and Ian Herbert, edited by Delbert Unruh Published in TD&T, Vol. 39 No.4 (Fall 2003) Theatre Design & Technology, the journal for design and production professionals in the performing arts and entertainment industry, is published four times a year by United States Institute for Theatre Technology. For information about joining USITT or to purchase back issues of TD&T, please contact the USITT office: USITT 6443 Ridings Rd. Ste 134 Syracuse, NY 13206 tel: 800-93-USITT (800-938-7488) tel: 315-463-6463 fax: 315-463-6525 e-mail: [email protected] web: www.usitt.org Copyright 2003 United States Institute for Theatre Technology, Inc. PQ 2003 JURY FINAL PROTOCOL At the awards ceremony for PQ 2003, held on the stage of Laterna Magika, June 16, 2003, the jury presented prizes to twenty-five countries or individuals. The award-winning exhibits are pictured on the following pages. After opening and introductory speeches, André-Louis Perinetti, chair of the jury, began the awards ceremony. His comments and the description of the individual awards read out by Ian Herbert, secretary of the jury, perfectly expressed, I believe, the reasoning and deliberations of the jury. They are reproduced here in their entirety. – Del Unruh André-Louis Perinetti: The tenth Prague Quadrennial has equaled, if not bettered, the success of its predecessors in providing a meeting point for practitioners, students, and lovers of theatre design and architecture. Under one magnificent roof are thousands of opportunities for stimulus and reflection, as well as sheer enjoyment of the “Labyrinth of the World and Paradise of Theatre.” In a time when we so often come up against the effects of globalization, PQ 2003 is very much the symbol of that cultural diversity which brings us together in the never-ending search for our shared humanity. The jury salutes the organizers of PQ and thanks them for the friendly efficiency with which they have helped to make our difficult task a pleasure. The smooth running of the exhibition and its associated events is all the more remarkable when we remember that less than a year ago flood waters were inundating many of Prague’s theatres, even approaching the PQ exhibition ground itself. If we were able to award a medal for brav- MEMBERS OF THE JURY: PQ 2003 Sharon Cort — Stage and costume designer, writer, theatre and film director, screenwriter, producer, teacher …we established a (Republic of South Africa) Dionisis Fotopoulos – Stage and costume designer, film designer (Greece) Kazue Hatano –Stage and costume designer, teacher (Japan) Ian Herbert – Theatre theoretician, critic, and editor of Theatre Record Magazine (Great Britain) Jirì Kotalìk – Art historian, architect, teacher (Czech Republic) Valerij Leventhal – Stage and costume designer (Russia) Alejandro Luna – Stage designer, architect (Mexico) Leszek Madżik – Stage and costume designer, director, teacher (Poland) Hartmut Meyer – Stage and costume designer, teacher (Germany) André-Louis Perinetti – Director and theatre manager, Secretary General of ITI, UNESCO delegate (France) Delbert Unruh – Stage designer, theatre theoretician, teacher (United States) 38 F A L L 2 0 0 3 TD & T firm rule that jury members could not vote or speak in support of work from their own countries. And we have kept strictly to that rule. Copyright 2003 United States Institute for Theatre Technology, Inc. BEST REALIZED PROJECT IN THE THEATRE ARCHITECTURE ery, courage, and sheer devoted effort, we would offer it with all our hearts to the Czech theatre community. We should also like to offer a welcome to those countries who have not been represented at PQ before, hoping that they already feel that they are not strangers in PQ’s paradise: India, Oceania, Peru and Taiwan. The members of this year’s jury were myself, André-Louis Perinetti, from France, representing UNESCO, Sharon Cort (South Africa), Dionysis Fotopoulos (Greece), Kazue Hatano (Japan), Ian Herbert (United Kingdom), Jirì Kotalìk (Czech Republic), Valerij Leventhal (Russia), Alejandro Luna (Mexico), Leszek Madżik (Poland), Hartmut Meyer (Germany), and Delbert Unruh (United States). Before I call on my colleague Ian Herbert, secretary of the jury and President of the International Association of Theatre Critics, to read out the list of our awards, you should know one secret of the jury room: we established a firm rule that jury members could not vote or speak in support of work from their own countries. And we have kept strictly to that rule. Ian Herbert: Thank you André. May I say that the jury recognizes the work of every single competitor in the PQ, and is aware that many of you, from large countries as well as small, have faced and overcome remarks by André-Louis Perinetti and Ian Herbert great difficulties to be here, be they problems of finance, health, travel or sheer international bureaucracy. You are all winners in our eyes. Unfortunately we cannot give you each a prize. So the jury has recommended to the PQ 2003 council that the following prizes be awarded. The Architecture prizes were for the best realized theatre project in that section. We have awarded two honorary diplomas, two silver medals and a gold medal. An honorary diploma goes to Russia, to the team responsible for the creation of the School of Dramatic Art in Moscow, which took an old cinema and put into it a building which has the true scent of theatre. The second [honorary diploma] goes to Sweden, for the two spectacular site-related projects in their well-presented exhibit. GOLD MEDAL Italy (Renzo Piano; Parco della Musica, Rome) SILVER MEDAL Spain (Catalonia) (Francesco Guàrdià, Ñunez Yanowsky; Lliure Theatre, Barcelona) Switzerland (Laurids and Manfred Ortner; Schiffbau, Zurich) ■ edited by Delbert Unruh HONORARY DIPLOMA Russia (A. Vassilev, S. Gusarev, I. Popov, B. Thor; School of Dramatic Art, Moscow) Sweden (Total Exhibit) PHOTOS BY ERIC FIELDING SPAIN ITALY SWITZERLAND Copyright 2003 United States Institute for Theatre Technology, Inc. A silver medal goes to Spain (Catalonia) for the work of Francesco Guàrdià and Ñunezs Janowsky in converting the Palau de Agricultura in Barcelona into a magnificent new home for the Theatre Lliure; and another [silver medal goes] to Switzerland. The Swiss exhibit does not reveal all its treasures at once, but it is worth taking the time to see the dramatic realization of the project by Laurids and Manfred Ortner, to make a cultural centre, Schiffbau, out of an old shipbuilding hall for the Schauspielhaus Zurich. We argued about whether the next winner was a theatre project, but it was for almost all of us the best realized project in the section. So the gold medal goes to Italy, for Renzo Piano’s great Parco della Musica in Rome. TD & T F A L L 2 0 0 3 39 NICKY GILLIBRAND 2003 AWARDS In the search for Best Theatre Costume, we found two candidates for honorary diplomas, a silver and a gold medallist. The diplomas went to Chang Hye-Suk for the simplicity of her Korean interpretations of Die Zauberflöte; and to Doina Levintza of Romania who gave us a crowd of theatrical characters, all on her own, showing great wit and invention. The silver medal goes to the sketches and costumes for some very exotic animal characters in Deer Women and Rhino, by Tarja Simonen from Finland. There was high praise for both the sketches and the use of materials in the work of the gold medal winner, a set of costumes for A Midsummer Night’s Dream designed by Nicky Gillibrand of the United Kingdom. TARJA SIMONEN BEST THEATRE COSTUME CHANG HYE-SUK GOLD MEDAL Nicky Gillibrand (United Kingdom, A Midsummer Night’s Dream) SILVER MEDAL Tarja Simonen (Finland, Deer Woman and Rhino ) DOINA LEVINTZA HONORARY DIPLOMA Chang Hye-Suk (Korea, Die Zauberflöte) Doina Levintza (Romania, Costume Collection) 40 F A L L 2 0 0 3 TD & T Copyright 2003 United States Institute for Theatre Technology, Inc. PQ SWEDEN BEST COMPLEX REALIZATION OF A SINGLE PRODUCTION GOLD MEDAL Lars-Åke Thessman, sets Karen Erskine, costumes The medals for Best Complex Realization of a Single Production are for work of a high order, but the jury regretted that there were not more such presentations from which to choose. The sheer scale and brio of the Zauberflöte presented as the complete Latvian exhibit made it impossible to ignore the work of Ilmars Blumbergs, and he receives the silver medal. There were several possibilities for a gold medal, all on the same elegant stand, and we finally settled on Electra, the work of Lars-Åke Thessman and Karin Erskin of Sweden. (Sweden, Electra) SILVER MEDAL Ilmars Blumbergs (Latvia, Die Zauberflöte) HONORARY DIPLOMA [None] LATVIA Copyright 2003 United States Institute for Theatre Technology, Inc. TD & T F A L L 2 0 0 3 41 RICHARD HUDSON BEST SET DESIGN GOLD MEDAL Richard Hudson (United Kingdom, Tamerlano) SILVER MEDAL Georgios Patsas (Greece, Persai) GEORGIOS PATSAS HARRIS KAFKARIDES HONORARY DIPLOMA Harris Kafkarides (Cyprys Troades) Jorge Ballina (Mexico several sets including Copenhagen) JORGE BALLINA 42 F A L L 2 0 0 3 TD & T 2003 In the category of Best Set Design there was as always an embarras de richesse. We decided to offer two honorary diplomas, one for a series of designs for theatre and opera by Jorge Ballina of Mexico; the other for a particularly evocative set for Euripides’ Troades by Harris Kafkarides from Cyprus. The set for another Greek tragedy, the Persians of Aeschylus, this one performed in one of the most famous of all Greek theatres, Epidauros, wins the silver medal for Greece’s Georgios Patsas. The winner of the gold medal for set design has already shared a Golden Triga. Now he receives a personal award for his work on Handel’s Tamerlano for the Maggio Musicale in Florence; born in Zimbabwe, he is Richard Hudson of the United Kingdom. Before announcing the winner of this year’s Golden Triga, I want to tell you about four honorary diplomas and four silver medals which the jury has awarded to a number of countries for their special contribution to this PQ. And before that, the jury would like to explain that there are no awards for the student exhibits in this year’s Quadrennial, because those exhibits fall outside our remit. However, it would not be fair to leave the student exhibits without comment, since so many of them rival the National exhibits in their vitality, invention and wit. To single out individual students, or even schools, would be invidious and probably counterproductive, but it will surely not be long before we see many of the young people whose work is causing such excitement in the “right wing” of the exhibition making their mark on a future “left wing.” Copyright 2003 United States Institute for Theatre Technology, Inc. PQ AWARDS Now to the Special Honorary Diplomas. The first goes to the Canadian exhibit, for its clarity of presentation and national spirit. For quality of presentation, and for the works presented, a diploma goes to Greece. A slightly frivolous diploma goes to a slightly frivolous exhibit, which brought to PQ a sense of play—and even an element of performance—in its visitors: the stand from New Zealand. The last honorary diploma is for the spirit of international outreach in the United States theatre exhibit, which not only featured many talented American designers, but was also inclusive enough to give prominence to overseas designers working in the USA. CANADA GREECE NEW ZEALAND SPECIAL HONORARY DIPLOMAS Canada (for its clarity and national spirit) Greece (for its presentation quality and for the work of its designers) New Zealand (for bringing a sense of play to PQ) United States (for its inclusivity and internationalism) Copyright 2003 United States Institute for Theatre Technology, Inc. UNITED STATES TD & T F A L L 2 0 0 3 43 NETHERLANDS SPECIAL SILVER MEDALS Netherlands (for its modern approach in presenting vital contemporary theatre) Russia (for the variety of its retrospective display of Boris Messerer) Taiwan (for its sense of national identity) Slovakia (for its selflessness in choosing to present a memorial to Ales Votava) RUSSIA TAIWAN SLOVAKIA 44 F A L L 2 0 0 3 TD & T 2003 PQ The first Special Silver Medal goes to a stand which aroused some contradictory reactions. It was much admired as a comprehensive representation of innovative contemporary theatre, but the jury was reluctant to see it set a trend, which might lead in future to a hall full of video screens presenting a “virtual PQ,” with not a model, fabric swatch or design sketch to be seen. But it is a beautiful and effective exhibit, and special silver medal for it goes to the Netherlands. Another silver, for the charm and variety of its retrospective display of the work of Boris Messerer, is awarded to Russia. Another, for an exhibit that brings out a strong sense of national identity, to Taiwan. And the final silver medal is for a homage paid to a designer who died tragically young, Ales Votava, who is celebrated in a act of selflessness which should have taken this exhibit out of competition but which we wish to reward here, by honoring Slovakia. Copyright 2003 United States Institute for Theatre Technology, Inc. AWARDS Which leaves the Golden Triga. I will reveal another secret of the jury room and tell you that the final vote for the major award of PQ was decided on our President’s casting a [tie-breaking] vote, but I can also tell you that this was one of a huge number of attempts to name the best exhibit in the national or theatre architecture sections. Once the selection was made, it was agreed unanimously by the whole jury. The Golden Triga for PQ 2003 is therefore awarded to a stand in the theatre section, which impressed the jury both for the high quality of its many and varied scenographic works, and for the simple yet effective nature of its presentation of the Labyrinth of the World and the Paradise of Theatre: it is the United Kingdom exhibit. ❖ GOLDEN TRIGA United Kingdom Copyright 2003 United States Institute for Theatre Technology, Inc. TD & T F A L L 2 0 0 3 45