VERSIONS: روسيا اليوم NOTICIAS FREEVIDEO ИНОТВ RTД FIND US ON: YouTube Twitter
breakingnews
Go to main page   Programs   Prime Time Russia   News   Kursk nuclear sub tragedy remembered on stage  
MORE ON THE STORY
London’s Covent Garden 29.07.2009, 19:24

Three weeks of Mariinsky Theater in Covent Garden

Russia’s Mariinsky Theater troupe comes to the main stage of London’s Covent Garden with Wagner’s monumental four-opera cycle and a collection of their best ballets.

22.08.2009, 10:35

Roster of Russian revolutionaries

A series of Russian revolutions is scheduled to take place in the UK in September but they won’t pose any threat to the British monarchy.

Anna Chapman 06.07.2010, 18:04 5 comments

Russian sex-bomb inspires spy film

Ozzie Osbourne’s celebrity daughter Kelly seems to have recently been under the spell of the sexy “Agent 90-60-90” Anna Chapman, the alleged Russian spy arrested in America on June 27.

A portrait of Sergei Diaghilev by Valentin Serov
24.09.2010, 12:21

Being Serge Diaghilev

A festival dedicated to one of the key figures in the world of ballet in the 20th Century, Sergey Diaghilev, founder of the legendary Ballets Russes, kicks off in London on Friday.

Ekaterina Shipulina (Image from bolshoi.ru) 08.08.2010, 16:01 1 comment

Mature reflection on dance

Some of Russia’s most promising ballet dancers – the leading light of the Bolshoi Theatre– will take part in the international project to be staged in America.

RT Photo / Diana El-Bakri 26.04.2009, 20:41 1 comment

Abracadabra experimental art festival hit Moscow

An interactive trip into experimental forms of art reverberates through the old wine warehouses at Moscow’s Winzavod Art Centre. This is the Abracadabra art festival, this year entitled ‘Evolution- New possibilities.’

02.06.2009, 18:03

A laugh-a-minute puppet show

A fusion of fantasy with reality. French guru of puppetry, Philippe Genty, has brought his surreal art to the Russian capital.

06.06.2009, 17:12

The invisible circus

The Chekhov Festival in Moscow welcomes a one-of-a-kind circus – the “Invisible” one. This stunning performance of two talents, Victoria Chaplin and Jean-Baptiste Thiérrée, celebrates fantasy and kindness.

26.07.2009, 14:44

Beware of “Lipsync”

A dreamer, an experimenter, a revolutionary... Canadian playwright/director Robert Lepage has brought his avant-garde performance “Lipsync” to the Russian capital.

07.08.2009, 21:07 1 comment

Cirque du Soleil to develop business in Russia

The popular Cirque du Soleil is planning to establish a permanent platform for their shows in the Russian capital, just like in Tokyo, Las Vegas and many European cities.

Kursk nuclear sub tragedy remembered on stage

Published: 24 June, 2009, 10:47

Photo from site www.youngvic.org

(9.3Mb) embed video

TAGS: Show, Theater, Russia, UK


The horror of the Kursk submarine tragedy has been brought to life for theatre audiences in London’s Young Vic theatre. The play's directors say they want to pay tribute to the victims.

In mid- August 2000, the world first heard of the Kursk submarine. An explosion on board had caused it to sink to the bottom of the Barents Sea, with 118 men on board.

23 submariners survived for a while inside an air pocket, while the world watched and wished for a happy ending. Tragically, rescue attempts failed and the entire crew perished.

The Sound & Fury Theater Company wanted to stage a piece based on the tragedy, but quickly shied away from setting it on the stricken vessel itself. So, they invented a British sub and put it in the area at the time of the disaster.

”It is such an extreme situation, and that is the respect that one should feel for the people who lost their lives was a key interest for us,” said Mark Espiner, co-director of Kursk production. “We had the empathetic feeling of what it must have been like on that submarine and we felt an urge to tell that story in the best way that we could, as British people.”

Something else emerged, he added – the extraordinary lives of submariners, who cut themselves off from the world for months on end, playing a sometimes fatal game of cat and mouse hundreds of meters beneath the sea.

Ian Ashpitel plays one of the crew, and is an ex-submariner himself. He advised the production team on the realities of life in the deep.

“They’ve got the camaraderie, the humour, the claustrophobia, the secrecy, the mission stuff,” he said. “The designer was on a submarine with a tape measure, measuring the gap between the seats, console and everything. His attention to detail is fantastic.”

The production also borrows from the seminal depiction of submarine life, the German film “Das Boot”. Both works choose to show the audience only the claustrophobic interior of the sub that the crew would see, and both use sound as a dramatic tool. Sometimes that use is sparing – the theatre goes to black, and we hear the voices of the crew of the Kursk for the first and last time.

“Dima, do you think we’ve got a chance?” says a crew member. “A small chance, yes.”

More than anything, this is a play about a brotherhood under the sea that transcends politics or conflict. The crew of the Kursk was part of that brotherhood, and central to this production is that their loss clearly echoes across international borders.

+11 (11 votes)
 
Back to top
next MORE NEWS
Screenshot from Vera Glagoleva’s “One war” 23.06.2009, 18:47

Russia shows off at Moscow International Film Festival

“New Russian Cinema”, one of the strongest programs of Moscow International Film Festival is on in the capital. Over 20 films from the most significant directors, not counting shorts and animation, are on display.

24.06.2009, 12:57

Moscow film festival inspires bike marathon

Across the country in 88 days – a Russian cyclist will travel 10,000 kilometers on his bike in a journey from Moscow to Russia’s Far East.