World Monitor Magazine June #3 | Page 86

ART this is a revolution and a breakthrough, and I am a witness to that. I have read that at the beginning of the 20th century, when the work The Rite of Spring appeared, the audience was in conflict over the music and ballet. I also faced this. It’s really scary. Being a revolutionary is very scary, because until a certain moment you feel that you are a provocateur and are responsible for people who are sitting in the house as well as those playing on the stage. In the Old House Theatre the audience was prepared and accepted this performance, accepted it very well in fact. Russia, AKHE – an engineering theatre of St Petersburg and Moscow, people without borders recognized by all – people of the world! etc. The category ‘innovative theatre’ also has its own audience. So, it was these refined theatre-goers who came to the premiere. Julie: It’s inspiring! Alexander Manotskov came up with an amazing musical score for this play. It seems to me that this is an event of significance not only for theatre, but also for music. Although the score itself is absolutely not punk, it is a very complicated professional musical work. Actors rehearse with notes, not having any musical education, except for those who have a music school behind them. They understand beats, bars, and my deepest gratitude goes to them – they are fighters. I could not do this, the process is tedious for me. Galina: The amazing masters and the Golden Mask laureates… That’s who the real innovators are. They won the award in 1998, when the Mask was not such a super-brand, having made a breakthrough in the academic theatre system. They have stated that an innovative theatre is not a marginal theatre, but it is an elite theatre. In general, AKHE has driven the innovation award, and this is the experiment. Julie: Let’s go back to The Snow Maiden. Of course, the Golden Mask represents experienced professionals who have a clear idea about a play. But the audience sees the play differently, don’t they? How did the audience accept the play? Galina: In the Old House Theatre, for several years the audience has been refined into one t hat is inclined towards perception and experimentation. This is a prepared audience. A part of repertoire is the normal play, or classics, such as comedy, ordinary drama, psycho drama, 80 world monitor Thirteen people are involved in the play. They strongly adhere to the music. For people from the streets it sounds like rapping on metal pans, the rustle of rubbish. But this is a clear and fast musical picture. The audience perceives it in different ways: someone refers to it as nonsense, someone takes is as a humor, and the musicians can hear that this is music played with quality. The Snow Maiden is an opera, first of all, so this ‘experiment’ with the music causes anger among some professionals, since There was the premiere, and on the second day experts of the Golden Mask arrived. In Russia, it happens quickly. And this raises the performance to another level immediately. The sense of significance, importance of the action appears among actors. Now I do not follow The Snow Maiden’s life: whether tickets are sold or how many people go to the theatre. I hear some brief reviews that the play was good, and the actors themselves say that this is a headline performance. We had a meeting in Pskov, at the Pushkin Festival. The city of Pskov and the festival itself exist in traditions. Conservative theatre-goers read the name: A. N. Ostrovskiy, The Snow Maiden, A. Manotskov – and came for classics, confident in the reputation behind these names. Knowing people involved in this festival, I suppose that they explained honestly what people were going to see. One day before the performance, I met Andrey Pronin (the leading theatre critic, directing several festivals in Russia). He loves The Snow Maiden, and is one of the fans who approved: The Snow maiden must be! He has written in Forbs about the seven performances that must be seen. Andrey has also known about ARTiShock since