BACKBONE-FLUTE
BACKBONE-FLUTE
LENSOVET THEATRE
ST. PETERSBURG, RUSSIA
Duration 1 hour 30 minutes
Director Maxim Didenko
Premier took place on 30 January 2014
CREATIVE TEAM
Set designer Pavel Semchenko
Composer Ivan Kushnir
Light Designer Andrey Lebed
Sound Designer Mikhail Pavlovsky
CAST
Olga Babich
Sergey Volkov
Nikita Volkov
Yustina Vonschik
Anna Zhmaeva
Dmitry Karanevsky
Galina Kochetkova
Sofia Nikiforova
Mark Ovchinnikov
Rimma Sarkisian
Antonina Sonina
Veronika Favorskaya
Kirill Frolov
Maxim Khanzhov
Lidiya Shevchenko
The performance involves fragments of texts by Vladimir Mayakovsky, Lilya Brik, Sergey Volkov and music by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky.
Director Maxim Didenko and his students will be composing performance on Mayakovsky, attempting to untangle the knot, in which the personality of the Poet is bound together with his beloved, friends, enemies, poetry, theatre and politics. The starting emotional point is found in the following Mayakovsky’s startling verses of the Prologue to his poem called “The Backbone Flute”:
I keep thinking more often:
should an ounce of lead,
As a period, at the end of my story go?
So, tonight,
not knowing what lies ahead,
I am giving a farewell show.
The performance will constitute a tight fusion of physical, musical and visual expression. The bitter words by Marina Tsvetaeva can be taken as an epigraph to this work: “For twelve years in a row, Mayakovsky the man has been killing Mayakovsky the poet, and on the thirteenth year the poet got up and killed the man.”
“In this kind of performance the actors get quite simplified tasks in the field of depicting human relations and psychological motives of behavior, but they require a very high level of technical skill. Performing a difficult rhythmic sound, plastic, musical score, playing with objects and interacting with each other is calculated by seconds. Here, the field of technology embraces lightness, and humor, and ability to convey instantly an emotional tone of the game or to show a mask. It is if all verbal text is translated into music, and the music is reproduced three times faster than the rhythm of ordinary life. On one hand, sharp and open theatricality has to do with the acting tradition of the Lensoveta Theater. And in this sense, the energy of futurism, post-dramatic performance has appeared in its very place, at least as a stage of the school. And then, with this level of technical skills, one can play whatever, even Chekhov. On the other hand, Didenko and Semchenko seem to have never before had to deal with such a powerful and unified team of stubbornly psychological “etude” actors, whose inevitable resistance to abstract theatrics should give unpredictable quality to this type of theater. After all, Mayakovsky, who was literally nailed to his deathbed at the end of the performance, still managed to run away…” (N. Pesochinsky, St. Petersburg Theatrical Journal, February 2014)