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Art in wartime ‎

Playwright Mayia Pramatarova on the play "Anna. Augmented reality. ‎Rehearsal', the philosophical steamboats and the culture that will endure

Photo: Facebook/ Mayia Pramatarova

War brings destruction and devastation in its wake. It breaks roads, destroys ‎bridges, loves, divides the united. Literally and figuratively. "The war is a ‎traumatic epidemic," says the genius of human medicine, the Russian Nikolai ‎Pirogov. A time that gives birth to our pains tomorrow. And if until recently ‎we could easily point to art as a cure for any mental trauma, today this bridge ‎seems to be in the target, as well. And we should have known better, having ‎passed this way! ‎

"Courage: a great Russian word suitable for the children's language of our ‎children, pure and free" - Anna Akhmatova *‎

A performance about Anna Akhmatova

Just a few days ago, another performance of "Anna. Augmented reality. ‎Rehearsal" - the latest play by Mayia Pramatarova took place. The one-actor show with the ‎participation of the actress Linda Ruseva is the work of the director Katya ‎Petrova and the set designer Tita Dimova-Vantek. The text, written on the eve ‎of the war with Ukraine, was inspired by the Silver Age of Russian culture ‎‎(connected with modernism, from the end of the 19th century to the 1920s and ‎‎1930s), the emigration of the intelligentsia from the country , known as ‎‎"Philosophical steamer", and of course from the life of one of the greatest poets ‎of that time and after - Anna Akhmatova. 


The author Mayia Pramatarova ‎herself is a true theatrical cosmopolitan. Playwright, theater scholar, translator ‎and director, she spent the last 13 years of her life between Bulgaria, the USA ‎and Russia, where until recently she was part of the team of the Bulgarian ‎Cultural Institute in Moscow. She knows well the skill of stage conversation ‎with time. ‎


‎"There is a need not only to articulate the performance itself, in which there are ‎some references between the time now and the time a century ago, but also, as ‎it were, to say everything that happened and why it is repeated in this way. The ‎reason for writing the play was the life of Anna Akhmatova. The idea was to ‎tell about the life of one of the greatest poets during the Silver Age through her ‎personal stories, her love affairs with the artist Amedeo Modigliani, with the ‎poet and her husband Nikolai Gumilyov, through her trepidation related to ‎the cities of Paris and Petersburg. But as if this personal story pushed us away ‎and focused us in the time that is cruel enough to its poets, the time of ‎philosophical steamboats, when not only philosophers, but also economists, ‎engineers, intellectuals leave Russia. And in an eerie way, that sounds so ‎contemporary and relevant right now. I deal with theater and the impossibility ‎of freely expressing yourself without being sanctioned was a reason for many ‎directors to leave Russia. Some stayed, their fate is not very easy," says Maya ‎Pramatarova.‎

The first theatrical reading in Bulgaria of the play   Finist - the Clear Falcon

Not like in a movie, war breaks roots. Just a few days ago, a theatrical reading ‎with elements of a performance of the play "Finist - The Clear Falcon" ‎translated by Maya Pramatarova and Ilya Zlatanov, with director Vasilena ‎Radeva and the participation of actresses Stanka Kalcheva and Bogdana ‎Kotareva, was presented for the first time in Sofia . The event is part of a ‎project in defense of the authors of the play, the playwright Svetlana ‎Petriychuk and the director Zhenya Berkovich, who were arrested in Russia. ‎


‎"Their performance received a Golden Mask award for 2022, and now, in a ‎paradoxical way, what they were awarded for is a reason to be accused now ‎following a slander. They are currently in pre-trial detention, and despite the ‎support of many people, actors and public figures in Russia and Europe, they ‎are still there. So the picture is very complex”,  says Maya Pramatarova, noting ‎the cultural tolerance and dialogical nature of the Bulgarian scene. ‎

Kaya Hristova in the play

"Where does art end and where does life begin?" is one of the postulated ‎questions in the play "Anna. Augmented reality. Rehearsal". The performance ‎itself, which is played in an unconventional place in the Sofia-based gallery ‎‎"Credo Bonum", gives a wide field for thoughts and passions. Maya admits ‎that the audience is always more than expected and stays after the "curtain ‎drop". "They stay for a conversation, which is sometimes almost as long as the ‎performance itself," she says. ‎

Linda Ruseva in a scene of the show

Today, Pramatarova's nostalgia and concerns are mostly related to when and ‎how each of us will be able to be there again, in Russia. For her personally, ‎cities like St. Petersburg and Moscow are very much connected to her ‎education and the friendships she left behind. She admits that she is not in a ‎position to outline the macro-framework of the consequences of what is ‎happening, because the picture is changing extremely quickly and abruptly. But ‎on a personal, human level, she is convinced of one thing:‎ "I will always be connected to this culture. And I hope that the situation, the ‎time apart, will not last that long."‎

Map drawn by Marina Demchenko

*The performance "Anna. Augmented reality. Rehearsal" can be seen in Burgas on October 20 within the 13th edition of the festival of the Bulgarian physical and visual theater "Age of Aquarius".


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Photos: Facebook/ Mayia Pramatarova, Kaya Hristova, Facebook/НЧ „Читалище.то“



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