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OH THOSE BEAUTIFUL WEIMAR GIRLS Plays La MaMa E.T.C. 12/4-13

By: Nov. 30, 2009
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The New Stage Theatre Company (www.newstagetheatre.org) makes its La MaMa debut December 4 to 13 with a cabaret-style re-imagining of its 2008 production, "Oh, Those Beautiful Weimar Girls," an evening of the music and dance associated with Anita Berber, the iconic actor/dancer/poet who epitomized for many the decadence of Weimar era Berlin. The piece is conceived and directed by Ildiko Nemeth. Texts are written by Mark Altman. Choreography is by Julia Atlas Muz and Peter Schmitz.

Weimar cabaret goers pursued glamour and pleasure compulsively, as though excess might grant liberation from the perils of their time. Weimar show girls became iconic symbols of this escapism, representing both protest and surrender. Novelist Jerry Stahl described their effect in his introduction to "The Hot Girls of Weimar Berlin" by Barbara Stahl, writing, "Even as Death, smiling like a sadistic Domina, lowers her high-heeled boot on your face, you can smile, and grind, and know that, for one tragic and ecstatic moment, release is yours. And you can forget about the obliteration to come ... The Girls of Weimar Berlin could make anybody forget."

Anita Berber, Weimar's best-known showgirl, performed in the nightclubs and casinos, naked except for a sable wrap and a pet monkey hanging from her neck. Her body was thin and androgynous; her bright red hair was cut in a rebellious bob and a silver brooch filled with cocaine usually hung around her neck. A pioneer of modern expressive dance, using the music of Debussy, Strauss, Delibes, and Saint-Säens, she was at first taken seriously, but eventually her artistry was overshadowed by her scandalous personal and professional lifestyle, as performances grew increasingly macabre. She was diagnosed with tuberculosis while touring in Lebanon in 1928, and died shortly afterward, at age 29. With original and classical music, dance and striking stage design, "Oh, Those Beautiful Weimar Girls" recreates some of Anita Berber's cabaret-styled performances, including much of her "repertoire of the damned."

The La MaMa production of "Oh, Those Beautiful Weimar Girls" will be a cabaret distillation of a musical theater work which New Stage Theater Company presented in November, 2008 at Clemente Soto Velez. That production was inspired when Ildiko Nemeth, Artistic Director of New Stage Theater, read "The Seven Addictions and Five Professions of Anita Berber" by Mel Gordon. Nemeth was struck by parallels between the Weimar period and our own and found the figure of Berber particularly affecting. Nemeth explains, "Some may argue that inhabitants of every age feel themselves at a precipice. Whatever we feel about the singularity of our own time, Weimar was unique. Its prevailing desperation and euphoria make it a symbol of every human life, finite and urgent."

To adapt her play to a cabaret venue and a late-night time slot, Nemeth will completely restructure her work for La MaMa, refocusing the production onto its salient dances and imagery and reducing its running time to about an hour.

Reviewing last year's production, Time Out (Adam Feldman) wrote, "Ildiko Nemeth's stylishly morbid dance-theater piece is nostalgic for a time when sleaze was decked out in corsets and feathered masks. It is a world of arty death-dances and morphine hazes, of repressed baronesses and their nubile, sexually curious daughters. And in the middle of this costume orgy drifts Anita Berber (Sarah Lemp), the real-life scandal queen of 1920s Berlin, numb from years of shocking. The show is at its most effective when it gives itself over to the spirit of risqué fun."

Richmond Shepard, writing in Lively Arts, praised "Oh, Those Beautiful Weimar Girls" as a "powerfully engaging evening" with "the sexiest choreography in town by Julie Atlas Muz and Peter Schmitz." Lauren Wissot, writing in TheaterOnline.com, praised its "thrillingly inventive costumes" by Javier Boné-Carboné and its "dark, sparkling set" by Jason Strum. Lisa Ferber, writing in nytheatre.com, called it "one terrific show" and a "well produced, highly watchable night of indulgence."

Larry Litt observed in the New York Theatre Wire, "We've all heard New York and San Francisco's diversely perverse art worlds compared to Weimar period Berlin. If it's true, there's a subtle message for artists and audiences in Ildiko Nemeth's production. We must be aware that we live in a world of contrasts and extremes on all sides. If you happen to engage in outrage as an art form, keep it small and be very ready to escape. If it's not true and we're far more tolerant than Germans were in between World Wars than you missed the point of the times we live in. Politics and extremist art do not mix well. Anita Berber's life, art and times are proof art is always a target for other extremes, namely the anti-art, fascist, religious right. As in Anita's life we must never let them stop us from making our version of art. Even at the cost of our lives.

In 2007, New Stage Theatre Company, under the direction of Ildiko Nemeth, presented the American premiere of "The Round of Pleasure" by Austrian playwright Werner Schwab, "the divisive mastermind of contemporary Austrian Drama." The 1986 play, a modernist re-telling of Schnitzler's "La Ronde," was staged with striking visual beauty and received enthusiastic notices. Columnist Glenn Loney (NY Theatre Wire) called for "elegantly-devised production" to be seen at the Salzburg Festival. The production was nominated in three categories for the 2008 Innovative Theater Awards.

In 2006, New Stage Theatre Company presented "Some Historic/Some Hysteric," a play set in late 19th Century Paris. It was based on the "Tuesday lectures" of Dr. Jean-Martin Charcot, the founder of modern neurology, who invited the public to Salpêtrière hospital to watch patients enact their neurological maladies. Time Out (Robert Simonson) deemed the production a "surreal vision" that was most effective in its images. Backstage (Irene Backalenick) called the play "an awesome aesthetic experience. Magnificent work, all around, courtesy of its set design, costumes, movement, music, performance and direction." "Some Historic/Some Hysteric" was subsequently nominated in 2007 for Innovative Theatre Awards in three categories: Outstanding Production of a Performance Art Piece, Outstanding Actress in a Featured Role and Outstanding Ensemble.

Director Ildiko Nemeth is a Hungarian native and a veteran of Eastern European experimental theater. Her desire to bring this form of theatrical expression into stronger focus for American audiences led her to form The New Stage Theatre Company in 2002. In Hungary, Nemeth garnered numerous prizes for acting, such as the Guardian Critics' Choice Award at the Scotland Fringe Festival in Edinburgh and the Best Performance Award at the International Gombrowicz Festival in Poland. She moved to the U.S. in 1998 and founded NSTC after graduating with a Master's Degree from The Actors Studio Drama School in 2002. At The Actors Studio, several of Nemeth's peers were inspired by her unique vision of bridging geographical and cultural gaps by collaborating with International Artists. This group became the original NSTC. Since then, the group of New Stage collaborators has included numerous talents, including a Guggenheim fellowship recipient and artists trained at the Julliard School.

The cast will include Chris Tanner, Kaylin Lee Clinton, Sarah Lemp, Catherine Correa, Markus Hirnigel, Denice Kondik, Jeanne lauren Smith, Charles Finney, Florencia Minniti, Lisa Kathryn Hokans, Christine Ryndak and Madeline James and John Rosania. Lighting design is by Federico Restrepo. Costume design is by Javier Bone Carbone.

Photo credit: Jonathan Slaff and Markus Hirnigel



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