* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Press kit for III
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Hrvoje Ivanković Sixty Years of the Dubrovnik Summer Festival Theatre (With Special Reference to the Last Decade) The foundation of the Dubrovnik Summer Festival was a result of the long-standing attempts to organise - under the influence of similar European institutions - a summer festival, during which theatre, music and folklore performances would take place in the historic and natural ambient of Dubrovnik. In spite of several attempts and additional incentives (for instance, Gundulić’s play Dubravka, directed by Tito Strozzi performed by the Croatian National Theatre of Zagreb in front of the Rector's Palace in 1933; the first music festival at Sponza Palace in 1938; performances at Bošković Square in 1949) the idea was realised as late as in September 1950, when the Dubrovnik Festival of the Dalmatian 16th and 17th Century Plays was organised. In addition to the plays performed by the theatres of Belgrade, Dubrovnik, Split, Zadar and Zagreb at the Summer Stage in Gradac Park, the Festival included several music and folklore performances. The event is considered the official beginning of the Dubrovnik Summer Festival. Decisive for its continuity were the efforts of Branko Begović, Marko Fotez and other enthusiasts, who organised the summer season of the National Theatre and the City Orchestra of Dubrovnik in 1951, completed with the operatic and ballet performances of the National Theatre of Sarajevo. That season, Marko Fotez's staging of Plakir by Marin Držić, in Gradac Park, denoted the beginning of the history of the Festival's ambient theatre, as its basic feature, which was confirmed through the theatre programme concept already in the summer of 1952. On that occasion Miše Račić staged Carlo Goldoni's Fishermen Quarrels in the Old City Harbour, while Marko Fotez directed his own amalgamation of Držić's Plays Tirena and A Story of Stanac in front of Sponza Palace. Fotez also staged Shakespeare's Hamlet at Fort Lovrjenac, which continued to be on the programme for twelve seasons consecutively with different line-ups, having become the world famous symbol of the Dubrovnik Festival. In spite of many problems with the organisation and dilemmas regarding its concept, this was the period when the Festival began to be constituted as a serious summer event, which could in principle be compared with similar festivals that were started in several European cities during the first post-war decade. In the organisational and financial sense, the forming of the first Festival Commission (1953) was crucial, and so was the acquired status of an institution with independent funding, under the patronage of Josip Broz Tito (1954). It meant a secure future for the Festival, but also its partial dependence on the political influence. From 1954 the Festival organisers began to work on a more solid concept of the music programme. Important for the theatre programme was the founding of the Festival Drama Ensemble, which began to function as a permanent production model, enabling the Festival to have its own plays with the finest actors from the entire country. From 1955, the Festival occasionally hosted international theatre plays, and the system of their selection in the future was mainly based on the relatively frequent guest appearances from England (the Old Vic Theatre Company, the Prospect Theatre Company, The New Shakespeare Company, the London National Theatre, etc.) with Shakespeare's works. At the same time, the stagings of Goethe’s Iphigenia in Tauris in Gradac Park, Vojnović's On the Terrace, at the Gundulić Summer Residence in Gruž (directed by B. Gavella, 1953), and Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream (Gradac Park, directed by M. Fotez, 1954) became the foundation and essential feature of the Festival's theatre programme. Based on the works by national and international classic authors, Držić and Shakespeare in the first place, the theatre programme seldom included the works by contemporary writers. It rather developed by accepting the contemporary theatre ideas slowly and extremely cautiously and by re-defining the ambient theatre concept (from the literal incorporation of a play into its environment to using the ambient as a metaphor or an active participant in the play), reluctant to start a polemical dialogue with the actual social problems and phenomena. In addition to Marko Fotez, the first part of the history of the Dubrovnik Summer Festival was marked by the theatre director Branko Gavella, who - apart from the afore mentioned plays - staged Lucić's The Slave Woman (1954), Držić's Tirena (1958) and Hecuba (1959), as well as Gundulić's Dubravka (1960). On several occasions from 1950 to 1961, they were joined by Bojan Stupica, but only with his guest performances (several versions of Uncle Maroje, Fishermen's Quarrels, Twelfth Night), which were often in conflict with the accepted postulates of the ambient theatre. In the summer of 1958, marking the 450th anniversary of Držić's birth, Kosta Spaić staged Držić's play The Miser in the Music School Park. Thanks to the virtuosity of its protagonist, Izet Hajdarhodžić, the play became an emblematic Festival's performance, and a major event in the context of the attempt to bring Držić's work closer to the receptive system of the contemporary theatre viewer. With a gradual disappearance of the first generation artists who defined the Festival programme, and also because of the constant lack of agreement regarding the repertoire policy (which was decided by the special commissions for theatre and music), the Festival faced a major crisis in the late 1950s, which resulted in the change of the Festival management in 1964: the first Festival director Joško Depolo (1954 - 1964) was replaced by Fani Muhoberac, while Kosta Spaić and Milan Horvat were appointed directors of theatre and music programme. According to Spaić's concept, Držić and Shakespeare remained the main strongholds of the theatre programme. His anthological staging of Uncle Maroje (Gundulić Square, 1964) is the first modern-history Dubrovnik staging of the original version of the play, and so is Joško Juvančić's staging of Grižula or Plakir (Gradac Park, 1967). With the new staging of Hamlet (directed by Denis Carrey, 1967) and several guest performances, the Festival repertoire of Shakespeare’s plays was expanded by the ambient staging of Twelfth Night (directed by Georgij Paro, 1964), Othello (directed by Stuart Burge, 1964) and Macbeth (directed by Vlado Habunek, 1970). There was also an attempt to expand the classical repertoire with guest performances and Festival productions, which, among other plays, included Calderon's The Mayor of Zalamea (directed by Dino Radojević, 1966), The Life and Passion of St Cyprian and St Justina by Marin Gazarović (directed by Božidar Violić, 1968) and Pavlimir Mystery Play of 1971, after the drama by Junije Palmotić (directed by K. Spaić, 1971). From 1968 on, aiming to make the Festival repertoire more dynamic and modern, Spaić introduced the so called Midnight Recitals and - from 1969 guest performances of international ensembles on a regular basis, the most attractive among them including the Stadttheater of Basel with Friedrich Dürenmatt's Play Strindberg (1969) and the Teatro Libero of Rome (Lodovico Ariosto: Orlando Furioso, directed by Luca Ronconi, 1970). Such attempts culminated in 1971 with the first performance of a work by a contemporary Croatian author at the Festival (Ivan Kušan: The Purpose of Freedom, directed by Miro Meñimorec), while Paro's direction of The Life of Eduard II by Bertolt Brecht clearly revealed the modern stage expression tendencies. In the political purge that took place in 1971, after the breakdown of „Croatian Spring“, the Festival director Fani Muhoberac was relieved of her post. Expressing their support, Kosta Spaić and his assistant Izet Hajdarhodžić resigned. Niko Napica was appointed new Festival director (he served in this post - including a short break - till 1985, when he was replaced by Luka Obradović). During a short period when Marijan Matković took over the directorship of theatre programme, particularly prominent were Paro's stagings of two plays by Miroslav Krleža: Aretaeus (performed from 1972 - 1983 in several venues at the Bokar Fort, the play is considered a canonical achievement of the Festival's ambient theatre) and Christopher Columbus, performed on an enlarged replica of the sailboat Santa Maria (1973). In spite of the controversy it caused, the staging of Uncle Maroje (directed by J. Juvančić, 1974) - based on the recent literary and historic interpretations of Držić's works - was also important, while Plakir or Grižula (directed by J. Juvančić, 1973), and Hamlet (directed by D. Radojević, 1974) were re-included in the Festival repertoire. The period in which Georgij Paro alone - or in collaboration with Joško Juvančić - was in charge of the theatre programme began in the summer of 1976 by a cycle of ancient tragedies (William Gaskill directed Sophocles' Oedipus Rex and Oedipus at Colonus, and Ivica Kunčević staged Zlatarić's translation in verse of Sophocles' Electra). The Festival, however, continued with the eclectic repertoire including numerous guest performances, occasional staging of contemporary works (such as Ranko Marinković's Glorija, directed by G. Paro, 1980 and Edward Bond's Lear, directed by Ljubiša Georgijevski, 1981) and the revitalization of „standard repertoire items“, of which only Juvančić's staging of The Trilogy of Dubrovnik (Skočibuha Palace, 1979) was a major success. The most popular play at the time was Goldoni's La Bottega del caffè (directed by Tomislav Radić in 1978), which Frano Čale transposed into the linguistic and existential milieu of the early 20th century Dubrovnik. From 1980 – 1983 the Dubrovnik Young People’s Theatre Days took place within the Festival. In spite of its varied programme (in 1980 it, for instance, comprised the Dogtroep of Amsterdam, the Bread and Puppet Theatre of New York, the Histrion Theatre Company and the Youth Group of Žrnovo), this mini festival was an intriguing but brief attempt to incorporate alternative theatre into the Dubrovnik Summer Festival. The Days also included the premiere of the ritualized staging of Držić's Hecuba (Pozdravi Theatre Company, director Ivica Boban, 1982), as a major contribution in evaluating the theatre output of Marin Držić. In the mid 1980s, the Dubrovnik Summer Festival, the Marin Držić Theatre and the Dubrovnik Symphony Orchestra become one institution (the Dubrovnik Festival), and the Artistic Council headed by Joško Juvančić was in charge of the theatre programme (Juvančić was the theatre programme director from 1992 - 2000). This period is characteristic of the stagings of church mystery plays by J. Juvančić (Ecce homo, 1985; Mavro Vetranović’s So the Brethren Gave Joseph Away, 1990), and W. Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet (directed by I. Kunčević, 1986), Euripides' Phoenician Women (directed by Paolo Magelli, 1987), Calderón's Life is a Dream (directed by Dušan Jovanović, 1987), the radical reinterpretation of Uncle Maroje (directed by P. Magelli at the Pustijerna archaeological site, 1989) and the restaged version of Hecuba (as a Festival Drama Ensemble performance, directed by Ivica Boban), which, in the summer of 1991, amazingly coincided with the beginning of the Serbian- Montenegrin aggression against Croatia. After the unblocking of the city and liberation of the Dubrovnik region, the largest part of which had been occupied and burned down, the Dubrovnik Summer Festival again became an independent institution (from 1991 – 1996 under the directorship of Tomo Vlahutin and from 1996 – 1999 of Frano Matušić). It gradually restored its classical repertoire (Tirena, Iphigenia in Tauris, Hamlet, Uncle Maroje, The Miser) and engaged new theatre directors (Ozren Prohić directed a patchwork-play comprising fragments from Držić's works entitled Father Marin's Dreams, and Janusz Kica directed Shakespeare's Julius Caesar), whereas the plays directed by Ivica Kunčević attracted special attention either because of the actualization of classical works (M. Držić's Tirena, 1993) or the splendid ambient theatre achievements (Mato Vodopić's A Tale of Sad Jele, 1994). ***** The turn of the century in the Dubrovnik Summer Festival was marked by debates about its organisation scheme and management. The situation was resolved in 2002, when a new managing model was finally defined. From then on, the institution was headed by a festival director responsible for business and artistic policy of the Festival, whereas his assistants in charge of the theatre and music programme were appointed directors of these two programme segments. The last two seasons under the directorship of Joško Juvančić (1999 and 2000) were characteristic of the new stagings of two formative works of the Festival theatre programme: Vojnović's The Trilogy of Dubrovnik and Držić's Uncle Maroje. In the summer of 1999, Joško Juvančić staged his Trilogy, as a special kind of synthesis of previous versions of this play, in the Art School Park. This was the first time in the Festival history that all parts of Vojnović's Trilogy were performed in the same venue. Conceptualised as a realistic classical play with enviable dramatic consistency and seductive nostalgic quality, Juvančić's Trilogy aimed to create the authentic atmosphere of „the yesterday Dubrovnik“ and to enliven Vojnović's characters. Such staging and the first class ensemble (in addition to the actors from the so called golden period of the Festival, the ensemble included the outstanding members of the middle and new generation of actors) - created a specific exchange of emotions with the local audience typical of Dubrovnik and its Festival. Awarded many times, the play was on the programme for five consecutive seasons, and the audience experienced it as another evocation of its collective (historic and Festival) memory. Kunčević's staging of Uncle Maroje in the summer of 2000 was based on completely different premises. Like in his anthological staging of the Uncle at the Croatian National Theatre of Zagreb (1981) that had never been shown in Dubrovnik, Kunčević treated this Držić's masterpiece as a potentially subversive text, in whose underground currents one could also catch a glimpse of the actual social correlations. In accordance with his consistent theatralization of the City, he chose a venue that had never been used before – the Fish Market or Peskarija in the Old City Harbour, situated in a little square adjacent to the Rector's Palace, as an unnamed symbol of the city authorities and everything connected with them. One more time Kunčević used the ambient as a metaphor; the venues also suggested the antitheses immanent in Držić's work and the principles of the mafiocratic social system and relations in the new world of transition. Turned into a symbol of authority, Laura was not present in physical form in Kunčević's staging of the Uncle. However, all verticals of the play led to her residence on the Rector's Palace terrace after all. Through a constant conflict between the upper, glamorous world and the liveliness of the plebeian marketplace in the grip of vice, the polarity «small ones – big ones», the «true» and «unworthy» people was developing, which drew the somewhat comic-wise restrained Kunčević's Uncle Maroje nearer to the contemporariness at least as much as the poorly reviewed and misunderstood Paolo Magelli's staging in the summer of 1989. The second Festival premiere in the anniversary year 1999 was Le malade imaginaire, actually Molière’s The Imaginary Invalid, turned into Dubrovnik’s linguistic and existential milieu in the early 18th century. In the second half of the 1990s, aiming to expand the Dubrovnik heritage repertoire at the Festival, Joško Juvančić explored the possibilities of staging the works from the rich opus of Dubrovnik's adaptations of the works by Molière, and this project completed a small cycle of the plays of the kind (it was preceded by George Dandin ou Le Mari confondu, 1997, and Le Bourgeois gentilhomme, 1998), which – in spite of the substantial artistic achievements - did not leave a visible trace. Namely, the choice of the French adaptations obviously did not aim at the socially critical part of Molière's opus, and these plays also used up their stage power mainly in implementing the famous quotation from the prologue to The Mistress of Elide: «I have no other thoughts but to recite comedies as the things that make people laugh». However, the dynamic and humorous staging of Le malade imaginaire (directed by Jiří Menzel), with the superb Pero Kvrgić - who again became the ruler of the Dubrovnik stages in the eighth decade of his life (he played as many as four roles in the summer of 2002) - is remembered as one of the plays that did not try to establish a dialogue with the ambient in which they were performed. This one more time showed the entire complexity of the often suggested co-production model involving the Festival and other Croatian theatres. The old idea about the plays that would - after their premiere at the Dubrovnik Summer Festival - continue their life on the stages of the co-production theatres, was in the first place actualized out of necessity in the first years after the Croatian War of Independence. The extended life of Le malade imaginaire (after the Dubrovnik premiere it was played more than a hundred times at the Komedija Theatre of Zagreb) was obviously the reason why the Festival returned to this model several times during this entire period, although in somewhat modified form, with the plays that unlike Le malade imaginaire - had originally been created in the Dubrovnik ambient and later performed in the classical theatres. If Juvančić, in the last two years of his directorship, closed the merely broached French adaptations opus, he definitely offered the possibility of opening a new phase in the Festival history with the second premiere play in 2000. That summer Fort Lovrjenac served as the stage for Luigi Pirandello's Henry IV. It was suggestively directed by Nenni Delmestre, who used the Dubrovnik's legendary Hamlet venue for further elaboration of the eternal Pirandelloan play between reality and fiction. One more time Dubrovnik found out that its potential theatrical venues could be suitable for the works by the so called modern classic authors; it was noticed one more time - as was the case with the quickly forgotten examples of Krleža's Aretaeus, Brecht's Eduard II and Marinković's Glorija - that the contemporariness went equally well with the Dubrovnik contemporariness, and that the repertoire turn towards modern drama could bring the so much needed inner dynamics, actuality and diversity to the Festival theatre programme. Everything afore mentioned began to materialize for a moment in 2001, in the 52nd Festival season, when - in the midst of the Festival management crisis - the committees consisting of several people defined the theatre and music programme. That summer, in the devastated lobby of the severely damaged Belvedere Hotel, Ivica Boban staged The Fourth Sister by the contemporary Polish playwright Janusz Glowacky, one of the most penetrating dramatic probes into the chaos and hopelessness that ruled one part of the postcommunist world. With plenty of auto-referential ideas, Georgij Paro staged Christopher Columbus, the poetic-oniric burlesque by the Belgian writer Michel de Ghelderode at Porporela. This was his comeback to the Festival, after some twenty years, where both as theatre director and director of theatre programme he left a significant trace. Although through a blend of intimate and global, realistic and hallucinatory, comic and tragic - The Fourth Sister offered a more contemporary theatrical expression and a larger number of authentic dramatic tones from the attractive, but too onedimensional and artificial Christopher Columbus, these two plays encouraged the more and more intensive debates on the Festival turn towards the repertoire that would effectively communicate with both tradition and contemporariness. The newly appointed Festival director Ivica Prlender and theatre programme director Ivica Kunčević undoubtedly understood the necessity of such a turn, and declared war to the repertoire's mummification and lethargy in the first two seasons of their mandate. Admittedly, this was not done in some programme text (the kind which the Festival lacked since Spaić's records from the mid 1960s) but directly «on the spot», through the choice of titles and selection of theatre directors. Kunčević and Prlender wish the Festival theatre programme to be a place of vivid polemics, and the first being targeted is Dubrovnik with both its mentality and recent problems threatening to make the City even more profane. In his first season Kunčević directed the famous play by Friedrich Dürenmatt, The Old Lady's Visit, in which the «main character» is the materially and spiritually devastated «city of culture» Güllen, characteristic of the provincial mentality, selfishness, timidity and hypocrisy of its residents. Engaging a large ensemble and using wide film frames and unobtrusive realism imbued with elements of grotesque and caricature, Kunčević filled every corner of the large space of the former Radeljević oil factory in Gruž with high voltage intensity, searching for nothing but the true sets of Güllen, the universal stage of Dürenmatt's modern morality, turned into an exciting Dubrovnik play by means of associative transfer. Another new play in the Festival theatre programme was contextualised at the same level of association: the comedy Los intereses creados (The Bonds of Interest) by the Spanish Nobel Prize winner Jacinto Benavente. The very fact that the play was set into the Dubrovnik environment - Luko Paljetak translated it under the title Ingropani interesi (The Entangled Interests) revealed Kunčević's guiding idea. Namely, Benavente ridiculed the mentality of the spiritually stale society. The selfishness, narrow-mindedness and calculating attitude of its members become the object of easy manipulation by the two shrewd cheaters, so that the challenge of comic clichés in Los intereses creados was joined by the potentially provocative satiric stings. The renowned Slovenian director Vito Taufer, a new and by all means desirable name at the Dubrovnik Summer Festival, used only a part of the offered cues, leaving the play in a kind of dilemma between theatricality and naive popular comedy. Furthermore, St John's Fort Terrace was not a suitable venue for the play, so that its life ended that same season. If the contemporary Dubrovnik theme had merely peeped shyly from the premieres at the 53rd Dubrovnik Summer Festival, the following summer – like never before – it also became an unmistakable source of a play. Kunčević, namely, invited Nataša Rajković and Bobo Jelčić. The truly original style of this directing and dramaturgical tandem - already renowned in a wider European context - was based on the amalgamation of the real/private and fictitious/theatrical, and on the full participation of the actors/performers in all elements of the theatrical act creation. This peculiar precedent in the recent history of the Festival, which had traditionally been suspicious of the authors coming from the sphere of unconventional and experimental theatre, resulted in a play entitled the Walking, Talking & Inventing Workshop. The play began in the venue Iza Roka, in the courtyard of the Domus Christi Old People's Home, ended at the Mrtvo Zvono Square, and in the meantime moved through six other venues, including both interiors and exteriors of the neglected, southern part of the Old City, hidden from the customary tourist routes. Apart from the professional actors, and partly students of the Zagreb Academy of Theatre Arts (in collaboration with which the project was realised), Rajković's and Jelčić's Workshop included local residents that happened to be in situ - the Home's inmates, children, eccentrics, married couples and lonely people - interweaving their life stories, real or imagined, with the reality of theatrical performance. Important also as a new contribution to the Festival's ambient theatre (the walk from one venue to another gave the ambient an active dramaturgical function, as was the case with Paro's staging of Krleža's Aretaeus), the Workshop grew into a penetrating phenomenological probe into the contemporary Dubrovnik, revealing the people on the other side of the gold-plated theatre sets in the every-day pursuit of a bit of happiness. In the summer of 2003, apart from the resolute turn towards contemporary themes and modern theatrical expression, the Festival management showed that it also based the theatre programme re-design on two more postulates: the expansion of the circle of classical titles adaptable to the Dubrovnik ambients, and the radically new interpretations of the formative works of the Festival repertoire. The former was connected with the highly cultivated staging of Heinrich von Kleist's Amphitryon, directed by Janusz Kica at Bošković Square, and the latter with the new staging of Držić's Grižula, directed by Paolo Magelli. One more time Magelli interpreted Držić as our contemporary, finding in his play an encoded message about the used-up quality of civilisation, misuse of power and blockage of communication channels. Omakala's answer to the question «What do people do in Dubrovnik?» «I am ashamed to say what» has become the key for understanding the flight of Držić's characters from the City to its surroundings as the «flight from Europe ruled by bank clerks». However, the engagement of the play, the unconventionality of the actor's expression and the spectacular quality of certain scenes (the play took place behind the Old Hospital Park, and the actors moved on the ground, on the branches of pine trees and on the ropes stretched between them) did not deprive Držić's characters of their immanent humour, spontaneity and recognizability, which satisfied the necessary portion of expectations of the local audience, which Branko Gavella described as «the outstandingly precious Festival consumer» already a the Festival beginning. However, many things changed since Gavella's time when, for instance, the traffic in Gruž Harbour was stopped, so that street-car noise would not disturb the performance of his staging On the Terrace. In the early 21st century and at the height of tourist season, the Festival began to lose the battle with catering entrepreneurship. The city venues that had once been ruled by artists, have been lost almost irretrievably, either because of the restaurants and cafés that have occupied them, or because of the noise coming from them. In the summer of 2004 this caused the Festival to start sailing towards the nearby islands. This, in a way, protest sail was at the same time the continuation of discovering new theatrical venues, which definitively turned out to be one of the essential features of Kunčević's and Prlender's directorship. The first of the two island performances, the unpretentious authorial project by Vanja Matujec An Island on Which Time Has Stood Still, was at the same time the first play for children in the history of the Dubrovnik Festival. It took place on the Islet of Supetar, while Joško Juvančić staged Ivo Vojnović's Equinox on the eastern, rocky shore of the Island of Lokrum, turning it into a melancholic-sentimental Amarcord with an abundance of contrasts, melodramatic tones and the deliberate archaic expression. Attractively fitting into the dreamlike ambient of Lokrum - in whose givens it discovered both the cues for symbolic-metaphoric accents and functional venue for the quite realistically designed scenes - Juvančić's play become another paragon of the Festival's ambient theatre. The play earned itself a cult status with the local audience partially owing to a bit surprising fact: it was the first Festival production of Equinox, whereas the previous one - that had been on the Festival's repertoire from 1972 to 1974 had actually been a guest performance of the Marin Držić Theatre. The third premiere on the 55th Dubrovnik Summer Festival theatre programme took place at Fort Lovrjenac. Using a seductive blend of word, movement and music, Dora Ruždjak Podolski staged A Soldier's Tale by Igor Stravinsky and Charles Ferdinand Ramuz, accentuating the secrecy and poetic quality of a fairy tale and in a way announcing another step forward of the Festival repertoire. It happened in the following, 56th Festival season, when Krešimir Dolenčić staged the ethereal Jean Giraudoux's melodrama Ondine in two venues (Šulić Beach and Fort Lovrjenac). Dolenčić, admittedly, did not quite manage to eliminate the danger of art-for-art's-sake that inevitably hovers over this fairytale play about a water nymph who tries in vain to love a mortal. On the other hand, he managed to create a stunning theatrical meraviglia in a perfect harmony with the theatrical venues and the inner rhythms of Giraudoux's characters, which was stylewise flexible enough to absorb the frequent shifts from melodrama to comedy, from poetry to grotesque and from realism to surrealism. In the second Festival premiere that same season, Ivica Kunčević in an even more direct way continued there where he had stopped with The Old Lady's Visit. Namely, in the year 2005, the 400th anniversary of the writing of Cervantes' novel El Ingenioso Hidalgo Don Quijote de la Mancha was marked, so that the character of this legendary dreamer was revived at the Dubrovnik Festival as well. However, Kunčević's staging included the dramatization of this famous novel - more precisely, a few episodes - only in its first part, performed on a small stage in front of the Jesuit Church. In the remaining part of the play, performed on the Jesuit Church stairs and in the Art School Park, Kunčević actually borrowed from Cervantes only a few characters and a series of associations, thus creating an indigenous play in which Don Quijote came into Croatia's everyday life of transition and tycoons, finding himself in the centre of a story of the material and spiritual sale and devastation of Dubrovnik. The dramaturgical co-ordinates of this jigsaw puzzle - affluently imbued with Vojnović's quotations - were, however, not assembled in the best possible way, so that the first part of the play - with plenty of sparkling and well balanced histrionic quality - turned out to be a lot more compact and theatrically more intriguing. After that season, accidentally or not, the Festival again turned toward classical writers – admittedly, still aspiring to unravel and re-interpret them through the experience of contemporary theatrical practice. The summer of 2006 was, therefore, in the sign of antique playwrights: in the manner of post-modernist theatre, Ozren Prohić staged the digested version of Aeschylus' Oresteia in the playground at the foot of Minčeta Fort, conceptualising it as a contemporary post-war drama, while - with the dramaturgical and authorial help of Željka Udovičić and friends - Paolo Magelli staged the play entitled [email protected], based on Aristophanes’ The Birds, in a grove at Medarevo. Magelli’s provoking political satire which could also be understood as a probe into social hypocrisy, a critic of neo-liberalist mind and an essay on (im)possibility of utopia - stayed half way between the idea and realization, offering the audience enough cues for further thinking, but also a lot of dilemmas about the cause and purpose of certain stage solutions and newly-written speaking parts. One of the two theatre premieres at the 58th Dubrovnik Summer Festival could not deal with such problems: William Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, was staged by Dora Ruždjak Podolski on the Island of Lokrum with the full appreciation of the text and its basic guidelines, yet without a stronger authorial contribution which could make her version of The Dream become more than a beautiful ambient decoration. Krešimir Dolenčić , on the other hand, started from a sharply opposed standpoint in his staging of Arkulin in the Art School Park. In Dolenčić’s own words, he wished to interpret this Držić’s comedy - that had not been performed at the Festival before and that had been preserved without the prologue and introductory part of Act 1 - as “possibly the most reactionary work by Marin Držić”, and as his squaring of accounts with the closed Dubrovnik society in which everyone became a victim of greed and servant of his minute interests”. Without scarifying the cosmic nucleus of the play, Dolenčić managed - through a dynamic play, based on the traditional model of interpreting Držić’s characters - to realise his aspirations, but also to draw some intriguing parallels with the contemporariness, proving one more time the openness of Držić’s dramaturgy and theatrical vitality of his work. A special kind of counterpoint to such interpretation of Držić was that season’s premiere of the play Visiting Father Marin. Conceptualised as a project of Joško Juvanćić workshop, with the participation of the second and third year students of acting at the Zagreb Academy of Theatre Arts and a number of their professors, the play Visiting Father Marin - based on the scenes from Venus and Adonis, A Story of Stanac, Tirena and Uncle Maroje - aimed to show various models of playing Držić’s works from the times of Gavella and Fotez till the present day. It was also a special kind of homage to the Festival as, undoubtedly, the major stage for the performance of Držić’s works, on which - ever since 1950 - the theatrical quality and vitality of his opus has constantly been analysed. Juvančić’s workshop was at the same time an integral part of the planned concept to include the youngest generations of actors in the Dubrovnik Summer Festival programme, inaugurated in 2003 by the project of Nataša Rajković and Bobo Jelčić, and continued in 2006 by the international master class of the prestigious Belgian theatre and visual artist Jan Fabre, which was also successfully presented in public. Both Arkulin and Visiting Father Marin were a good overture to the forthcoming 59th Festival season, dedicated entirely to Marin Držić. In the year when the 500th anniversary of Držić's birth was marked, all three premieres were directly or indirectly connected with the life and work of this great Dubrovnik's and Croatia's comedy writer. The first one was Darsa Farsa, a humorous dramolet in verse written in „Držić's Dubrovnik dialect“, in which the writer and theatre director Matko Sršen confronted his own versions of Uncle Maroje, Scoop and Allgold in order to try Father Marin - in his absence - for conspiracy (the play was performed in the Rector's Palace Atrium which was acoustic-wise unsuitable for the play). The second premiere Voices from the Mountain was another workshop project, in which Rene Medvešek together with the students of the Zagreb Academy of Theatre Arts and actors from the Zagreb Youth Theatre - amalgamated the fragments from Držić's Tirena and Petar Zoranić's The Mountain into a dramaturgically compact and interpretationwise impressive organic unit. The last premiere was Kunčević's staging of The Miser at Bošković Square. In spite of its direct clash with the contemporariness - which occurred at its end - the play one more time reminded us of the traditional models and high standards of interpretation of Držić's works, most of all defined precisely through the Dubrovnik Summer Festival theatrical practice. The programme dedicated to Držić also included six guestperformances of his comedies, which were utterly different where the quality was concerned. Worth mentioning among them was the Hungarian Uncle Maroje, staged by Attila Vidnyánszki at the Debrecen Theatre. These performances were, of course, not the only guestperformances on the Festival theatre programme in the last ten years. In this period the relatively continuous collaboration with the Marin Držić Theatre carried on, which, apart from coproduction projects, appeared at the Festival with its own plays, most often connected with the Dubrovnik theatrical and literary theme (The Innocent Susannah by Mavro Vetranović, 2002; Pomet by Matko Sršen, 2003; Viola by Luko Paljetak, 2004 and The Lovers by an anonymous author, 2005), which was at times presented also by other guest theatre companies (Uncle Maroje performed by the Italian Drama of the Ivan von Zajc Croatian National Theatre of Rijeka, 1999, as well as Grižula and Uncle Maroje performed by the American students' theatre companies of Pennsylvania and Washington, 2004). In addition to occasional guest appearances (for instance, the Greek National Theatre of Athens with Oedipus Rex, the Laboratorio Teatro Settimo of Turin with The Phoenician Women, 2000 and the Miskolc National Theatre with Paolo Magelli's play Adieu Europe, Europe Adieu, 2007), the old idea about the exchange of projects with the Split Summer Festival was also revived (Birdies by Filip Šovagović, 2001, and Antigone, Queen of Thebes by Tonći Petrasov Marović, 2005). However, where guest performances as the planned and potentially important segment of the Festival theatre programme are concerned, worth mentioning is the idea of inviting representative projects of the cosmopolitan contemporary theatres to Dubrovnik. Promoted in the early 21st century, the idea was soon abandoned, in spite of the positive reviews and stimulating impulses brought by the guest-performances of Eimuntas Nekrošius with Shakespeare's Othello (Dubac Quarry, 2002), Peter Brook with Hamlet (Island of Lokrum, 2003), and later Jan Fabre with the project Quando l'uomo principale è una donna (2006). However, if we interpret the last decade of the Dubrovnik Summer Festival as a period in which the ideas about its re- design were interwoven with the attempts to bring new life to the works on which the Festival theatre had built its specific quality and recognizability, it is absolutely certain that this experience could also influence its future.