{"title":"“我希望表演引发的争论能改变一些事情”:采访丹麦剧作家克里斯蒂安·洛里克","authors":"Karolína Stehlíková, Christian Lollike","doi":"10.5817/TY2020-2-10","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Christian Lollike (b. 1973) studied philosophy and literature at the University of Roskilde. Between 1998 and 2001, he also studied stage writing at the Danish School of Art at the Aarhus Theatre. He writes radio plays, screenplays and drama, which he also stages himself. His work also includes sculpture, concert, ballet, opera, and action art. In 2005–2011, he worked at the Aarhus Theatre as a regular author and director. Today he is the artistic director at Copenhagen’s Sort/Hvid Theater (formerly Café Teatret), which focuses on performative art. Lollike received several awards. He won 2013 Playwright Award for his plays Shaft (Skakten), Cake Factory (Kagefabrikken) and for the dramatization of the manifesto of the Norwegian extremist Anders Breivik, Manifest 2083. His staging of Danish classic Erasmus Montanus in the Aarhus Teater in 2017 resulted in three Reumert Awards. In his plays, Lollike deals with the political and moral problems of contemporary Western world. His texts are often provocative and controversial, revealing the dark sides of modern society. They address many diverse issues such as prostitution, media and advertising, church, euthanasia, immigration and terrorism, and environmental crisis. Several of Lollike’s plays were translated and staged in the Czech Republic. The play The Ordinary Life (Det normale liv), directed by Josef Kačmarčík, was staged by the National Moravian-Silesian Theatre in Ostrava in 2017. This interview is one of the outputs of the course in Contemporary Scandinavian Drama held at the Department of Theatre Studies during the spring term 2020. After reading a selected play by Christian Lollike, students were asked to think of some questions for the playwright. Some questions were then sent to Christian Lollike, who kindly answered them via e-mail during June 2020.","PeriodicalId":37223,"journal":{"name":"Theatralia","volume":"1 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"'I hope that the debates the performances stimulate will change something' : interview with Danish playwright Christian Lollike\",\"authors\":\"Karolína Stehlíková, Christian Lollike\",\"doi\":\"10.5817/TY2020-2-10\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Christian Lollike (b. 1973) studied philosophy and literature at the University of Roskilde. Between 1998 and 2001, he also studied stage writing at the Danish School of Art at the Aarhus Theatre. He writes radio plays, screenplays and drama, which he also stages himself. His work also includes sculpture, concert, ballet, opera, and action art. In 2005–2011, he worked at the Aarhus Theatre as a regular author and director. Today he is the artistic director at Copenhagen’s Sort/Hvid Theater (formerly Café Teatret), which focuses on performative art. Lollike received several awards. He won 2013 Playwright Award for his plays Shaft (Skakten), Cake Factory (Kagefabrikken) and for the dramatization of the manifesto of the Norwegian extremist Anders Breivik, Manifest 2083. His staging of Danish classic Erasmus Montanus in the Aarhus Teater in 2017 resulted in three Reumert Awards. In his plays, Lollike deals with the political and moral problems of contemporary Western world. His texts are often provocative and controversial, revealing the dark sides of modern society. They address many diverse issues such as prostitution, media and advertising, church, euthanasia, immigration and terrorism, and environmental crisis. Several of Lollike’s plays were translated and staged in the Czech Republic. The play The Ordinary Life (Det normale liv), directed by Josef Kačmarčík, was staged by the National Moravian-Silesian Theatre in Ostrava in 2017. This interview is one of the outputs of the course in Contemporary Scandinavian Drama held at the Department of Theatre Studies during the spring term 2020. After reading a selected play by Christian Lollike, students were asked to think of some questions for the playwright. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
Christian Lollike(生于1973年)在罗斯基勒大学学习哲学和文学。1998年至2001年间,他还在奥胡斯剧院的丹麦艺术学院学习舞台写作。他写广播剧、电影剧本和戏剧,并亲自担任舞台表演。他的作品还包括雕塑、音乐会、芭蕾、歌剧和动作艺术。2005年至2011年,他在奥胡斯剧院担任常规作家和导演。如今,他是哥本哈根Sort/Hvid剧院(原caf剧院)的艺术总监,该剧院专注于表演艺术。洛里克获得了几个奖项。2013年,他凭借剧本《Shaft》、《Cake Factory》和将挪威极端分子安德斯·布雷维克的宣言改编为戏剧的《Manifest 2083》获得剧作家奖。2017年,他在奥胡斯剧院上演的丹麦经典作品《伊拉斯谟·蒙塔努斯》获得了三项鲁默特奖。在他的戏剧中,洛里克处理当代西方世界的政治和道德问题。他的作品经常具有煽动性和争议性,揭示了现代社会的黑暗面。它们涉及许多不同的问题,如卖淫、媒体和广告、教会、安乐死、移民和恐怖主义、环境危机。洛里克的几部戏剧被翻译并在捷克共和国上演。约瑟夫·Kačmarčík导演的话剧《平凡的生活》(Det normale liv)于2017年在俄斯特拉发的摩拉维亚-西里西亚国家剧院上演。本次访谈是2020年春季学期戏剧研究系举办的当代斯堪的纳维亚戏剧课程的成果之一。在阅读了克里斯蒂安·洛里克(Christian Lollike)所选的剧本后,学生们被要求为剧作家思考一些问题。然后将一些问题发送给克里斯蒂安·洛里克,他在2020年6月通过电子邮件亲切地回答了这些问题。
'I hope that the debates the performances stimulate will change something' : interview with Danish playwright Christian Lollike
Christian Lollike (b. 1973) studied philosophy and literature at the University of Roskilde. Between 1998 and 2001, he also studied stage writing at the Danish School of Art at the Aarhus Theatre. He writes radio plays, screenplays and drama, which he also stages himself. His work also includes sculpture, concert, ballet, opera, and action art. In 2005–2011, he worked at the Aarhus Theatre as a regular author and director. Today he is the artistic director at Copenhagen’s Sort/Hvid Theater (formerly Café Teatret), which focuses on performative art. Lollike received several awards. He won 2013 Playwright Award for his plays Shaft (Skakten), Cake Factory (Kagefabrikken) and for the dramatization of the manifesto of the Norwegian extremist Anders Breivik, Manifest 2083. His staging of Danish classic Erasmus Montanus in the Aarhus Teater in 2017 resulted in three Reumert Awards. In his plays, Lollike deals with the political and moral problems of contemporary Western world. His texts are often provocative and controversial, revealing the dark sides of modern society. They address many diverse issues such as prostitution, media and advertising, church, euthanasia, immigration and terrorism, and environmental crisis. Several of Lollike’s plays were translated and staged in the Czech Republic. The play The Ordinary Life (Det normale liv), directed by Josef Kačmarčík, was staged by the National Moravian-Silesian Theatre in Ostrava in 2017. This interview is one of the outputs of the course in Contemporary Scandinavian Drama held at the Department of Theatre Studies during the spring term 2020. After reading a selected play by Christian Lollike, students were asked to think of some questions for the playwright. Some questions were then sent to Christian Lollike, who kindly answered them via e-mail during June 2020.