Secondhand
Svetlana Alexievich is a Belorussian writer, who won the Nobel-prize of Literature for her latest book, Secondhand Time. Our performance is based on these interviews, and uses the same collage-technique, as the book itself.
Svetlana Alexievich is a Belorussian writer, who won the Nobel-prize of Literature for her latest book, Secondhand Time. Our performance is based on these interviews, and uses the same collage-technique, as the book itself.
Ön egy múltbeli eseményre keresett rá. Kérjük, válogasson aktuális kínálatunkból a Jegy.hu keresőjében!
Last event date: Sunday, May 14 2023 7:00PM
Svetlana Alexievich is a Belorussian writer, who won the Nobel-prize of Literature for her latest book, Secondhand Time. She travelled all across the Commonwealth of Sovereign States to conduct interviews with the witnesses of the fall of the Soviet Union, the nuclear catastrophe in Chernobyl, the Soviet-Afghan war and World War II. These confessions give us a detailed and complex picture of the traumas and the spirit of the post-Soviet society.Our performance is based on these interviews, and uses the same collage-technique, as the book itself. This special structure gave the idea of this unique collaboration between the Örkény Theatre and the 3rd grade theatre director-class of the Theatre and Film Academy. The performance has eight directors: two teachers, who are also well-known directors, and their six students. The working method results in a colorful, surprising and unique show.
Hiperkarma frontman Róbert Bérczesi exploded onto the Hungarian alternative scene in the early ’00s, when his unique and sincere lyrics quickly made him a cult figure in the country’s music world. Although the group has disbanded and reformed more than once over the years, it has always retained its unique, lyrical and raw sound, one in which personal struggles and inner journeys play a central role.
At every stage in his career, Nikolas Takács has consistently delivered an exciting combination of unique musical inspiration and independent artistic exploration. Born into a musical family in Galanta (now Slovakia) in 1986, he won his first talent contest at the age of ten. This was followed by formal music training and a long succession of solo concerts. His style, which fearlessly blends jazz, soul and pop, firmly positions him as one of the most multifaceted performers in Hungarian popular music today.
Founded in 1999, the Liszt Prize-winning, Debrecen based Talamba has been one of Hungary’s leading percussion ensembles for 27 years - and as the title of their new programme - making its debut at Müpa - suggests, they keep moving forward, and their rhythm continues unabated.
The Hungarian State Folk Ensemble's nativity programme counts down to the night of the birth of Jesus, with scenes that…
Recirquel’s new production, Paradisum explores the myth of rebirth following the silence of a destroyed world, where the means of…
Following the great success of their 2023 concert, the Luxembourg Philharmonic Orchestra returns to Müpa Budapest under the baton of…
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