TADEUSZ KANTOR - Nigdy tu juz nie powróce (I shall never return)
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A unique record of Tadeusz Kantor's play " Let the artists die" recorded during live show at Stodola Students' Club in Warsaw, February 22-24, 1990. Performed by he Cricot 2 Theatre, directed by Tadeusz Kantor.
TADEUSZ KANTOR Nigdy tu juz nie powróce (I will never come back)
Number of disks: 1 Format: DVD Region: 0 (PAL). European or multi-system DVD player is required to see this DVD. Studio: Cricoteka (Centre for the Documentation of the Art of Tadeusz Kantor) Total time: 80 minutes Format: 4:3 Audio: DD 2.0 Language version: Polish Subtitles: English
A unique record of Tadeusz Kantor's play " Let the artists die" recorded during live show at Stodola Sudents' Club in Warsaw, February 22-24, 1990. Performed by he Cricot 2 Theatre, directed by Tadeusz Kantor.
* Author: Tadeusz Kantor * Screenplay: Tadeusz Kantor * Directed by: Tadeusz Kantor * Implementation of the performance: Cricot Center Theater 2 (Cracow), Centro di Ricerca Per il Teatro (Milano), Comune di Milano Settore Cultura, Festival d'Automne Georges Pompidou Center, West Berlin Kulturstadt Europe * TV Output: Andrzej Sapija * Photos: Tadeusz Kantor * Light Output: Miroslaw Poznanski * Camera operator: Michal Kubiak, Andrzej Maleszewski, Zbigniew Malinowski * Set design: Tadeusz Kantor * Sound: Ryszard Litwin * Editing: Paul Fila, Marek Szydlowski * Editors: Maria Bardini * Engineers of car: Donate Tarczynski, Zenon Laszewski * Management of production: Malgorzata Saks * Actors: Tadeusz Kantor (I - myself, Andrzej Welminski (Owner Pubs), Ludmila Ryba (slut Bosa), Lori Della Rocca (Szmul, citizen of Wielopole), Zbigniew Gostomski (Father of Wielopole), Stanislaw Michno ( Fair's Speaker), Maria KRASICKA (deportee from Sybir), Waclaw Janicki (Hassid I / Bishop I), Leslaw Janicki (Hassid II / Bishop II), Mira Rychlicka (Water Hen), Teresa Welminska (Princess Kremlinska), Bogdan Renczynski (flunkey princess), Ewa Janicka (Woman with pud on rats), Lech Stangret (player's cards), Stanislaw Dudzicki (Rat), John Book (Great Gymnastics), Zbigniew Bednarczyk (English Lady), Roman Siwulak (Apacz / Hangman), Anna Halczak (The Lady), Luigi Arpini (armored violinist), Jean-Marie Barotte (armored violinist), Eros Doni (armored violinist), Wlodzimierz Mountain (armored violinist), Janusz Jarecki (armored violinist), Andrzej Kowalczyk (armored violinist)
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About Tadeusz Kantor:
Tadeusz Kantor (1915-1990) was once called "the best artist of the world from amongst Polish artists and the most Polish one from amongst artists of the world". Already during his life, some considered him a genius, and others a master of mystification or a clever imitator only. Today, no one should doubt that this artist, who passed away in 1990, was one of the greatest creators of the art of the twentieth century. Even though it is difficult to explain what the phenomenon of his imagination was based upon. He was a versatile artist; a "total" one as he used to say, thus it is very risky to divide his output into individual "disciplines". Being a painter, stage designer, poet, actor, and happener, he made a name for himself as a man of theatre, but even in the domain of it he remained first of all a painter who thought with images and used actors and props instead of paints.
Kantor's greatest achievement was The Cricot 2 Theatre. Its performances, beginning with The Dead Class (1975), attained the level of masterpiece. The unusual formula of his Theatre of Death consisted in creating artistic illustration for mechanisms of memory. Sequences of unreal pictures, snatches of memories, obtrusively returning scenes, and absurd situations: everybody knows this from his own experience. And all of us are confused in a similar way: series of painful resentments, daring longings, remembered fragments of sentences, comical scraps of the past. We are physical, and it appears that our memory and imagination are also physical. We do not exist without form; we think and even feel with images. And Kantor could show it on the stage. He created an unusually suggestive space in which the living and the dead have been mixed, where the shyest desires and most cruel experiences, i.e. war, love and crime, fear, passion and hatred have been revealed. On faded photographs of his family album, the personal biography intertwined with history, where national myths and private obsessions returned with tiresome echoes, like in the distorting mirror.
(bio courtesy of Elzbieta Chrzanowska-Kluczewska and Cricoteka)
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Tadeusz Kantor's Little Manifesto:
I wish to read to you, Ladies and Gentlemen, my Little Manifesto (I am still writing manifestos), which was written especially for this occasion.
Before I read it, however, to make it clearer will take the liberty to remind you that the fundamental (if I could use this pathetic word) idea behind my creative work has been and is the idea of reality, which I labeled the Reality of the Lowest Rank.
It can be used to explain my paintings, emballages, poor objects, and equally poor characters, who, like the Prodigal Son, return home after a long journey. Today I would like to use the same metaphor to describe myself:
"It is not true that MODERN man has conquered fear. This is a lie! Fear exists. There is fear of the external world, of what the future will bring, of death, of the unknown, of nothingness, and of emptiness.
It is not true that artists are heroes and fearless victors, as we are led to believe by old legends and myths.
Believe me, they are poor and defenseless beings who chose to take their place opposite fear. It was a conscious act. It is in consciousness that fear is born. I am standing in front of you. I, the accused who is standing in front of harsh but just judges. And this is the difference between the dadaists, whose heir I am, and me.
"Please, get up!" cried the Grand Scoffer, Francis Picabia. "You are indicted."
And today I will correct this once impressive invocation: I am standing in front of you. I am the one who is accused and indicted.
I am supposed to justify myself and find evidence of, I do not know which, my innocence or my guilt.
I am standing in front of you, as I used to stand at the class desk... in the past..., and I am saying: I forgot I knew, I assure you, Ladies and Gentlemen..."