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Duna Művészegyüttes: Szépséges Mezőség / LISZT ÜNNEP 2021

Duna Művészegyüttes: Szépséges Mezőség / LISZT ÜNNEP 2021

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Last event date: Sunday, October 24 2021 7:00PM

Featuring: Andrea Navratil – voice, Károly Tóth – prose, Zsolt Barcza – accordion, Göncöl Band

 

Music editors: Zoltán Dulai, Gergely Koncz, Albert Mohácsy, Andrea Navratil

Set: Gábor Michac

Costumes: Borbála Winklerné Petri-Kiss

Lighting, animation: Károly Lendvai

Dancer masters: Norbert Busai, Zsuzsanna Busai, Ágnes Farkas, Ignác Kádár, Anett Nagypál, Csaba Szabó, Balázs Sáfrán

Consultant: Sándor Varga

Choreographers: Enikő Kocsis, Dezső Fitos, Zsolt Juhász, Tamás Farkas

Assistants to the director: Katalin Bonifert, Gyula András Soós

Director: Zsolt Juhász

 

Inspired by the success of its production, Our Love, Kalotaszeg, the Danube Art Ensemble chooses again to focus on the folk art and dance tradition of a single region, this time the Mezőség (Câmpia Transilvaniei) in Transylvania. The Mezőség is highly prized by those who love folk art, and the region has attracted countless amateur and professional collectors. Béla Bartók, Zoltán Kodály, László Lajtha, Károly Kós, Zoltán Kallós, György Martin, Sándor Tímár and Ferenc Novák are just some of the many researchers whose work has saved the archaic folk art of the Mezőség from oblivion. The region is home to some 300 settlements, and an archaic culture of dance and music that is particularly rich thanks to the intertwining and interaction of Hungarian, Romanian, Romany and Saxon cultures. This production revolves around this kind of multiculturalism.

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Adventure-filled dance drama inspired by István Fekete's novel The Testament of Aga Koppanyi

There are times when it is not silence that makes us recall something, but music. A familiar sound. A melody that takes you home. On All Souls' Day, we think not only of those who are no longer with us, but also of what they left us with: stories, scents, sentences, sounds.

Why is the 400-year-old story of Romeo and Juliette, the world’s best known romantic tragedy, still so relevant today? Because love is eternal, the rebelliousness of youth persists, and the world is still filled with inexplicable contraditions.

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