“观众中没有人”:捷克斯洛伐克舞台上的第一部苏联音乐剧

Pub Date : 2022-12-01 DOI:10.1386/smt_00104_1
Vojtěch Frank
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引用次数: 0

摘要

1968年苏联入侵后,捷克斯洛伐克人民无法避免苏联文化的存在,这是服从苏联霸权的象征性表现。在研究这个时代的戏剧文化时,人们会发现国家的文化政治、剧院剧目制作原则和观众感知之间存在着一种非常特殊的紧张关系。20世纪70年代初,随着新的苏联音乐剧开始出现在捷克斯洛伐克的舞台上,作为苏联的强制性名称,观众并不十分赞同,即使官方话语创造了一个完全不同的形象。对安德烈·埃什帕伊1971年在布拉格制作的苏联音乐剧《无人比我幸福》的案例研究表明,文化政治对戏剧业的影响,话语如何平衡该剧的不受欢迎程度及其政治重要性,以及参与该剧的各个代理人如何看待该剧。对这个以前未被触及的领域的研究可以揭示捷克斯洛伐克晚期共产主义的文化机制、共产主义国家流行文化的性质以及苏联与其卫星之间的关系。
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‘There was no one in the audience’: The first Soviet musical on a Czechoslovak stage
After the 1968 Soviet invasion, the people of Czechoslovakia could not avoid the presence of Soviet culture, which was a symbolic manifestation of subordination to the Soviet hegemony. When researching the theatre culture of this era, one comes across a very specific tension between the state’s cultural politics, the principles of theatres’ repertoire-making and audience perceptions. As new Soviet musicals began to appear on Czechoslovak stages in the early 1970s, serving as obligatory Soviet titles, audiences were not very approving, even as the official discourse created a completely different image. The case study of the 1971 Prague production of the Soviet musical Nobody Is Happier Than Me by Andrei Eshpai shows the impact of cultural politics on the theatre industry, how the discourse balanced the unpopularity of the show and its political importance and how the production was perceived by various agents involved in it. Research on this previously untouched area can shed light on the cultural mechanisms of late communism in Czechoslovakia, the nature of popular culture in communist states and the relationship between the Soviet Union and its satellites.
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