The play will be the introductory event of La MaMa's European Young Directors Forum, a series of productions, panels and workshops which also includes "A Letter to Heiner Müller" by Zagreb Youth Theatre of Croatia December 6 to 9. Both plays will be presented in La MaMa's Ellen Stewart Theater , 66 East Fourth Street. Between these two productions, there will be a series of panels and workshops December 2 to 4 in La MaMa's rehearsal studios, 47 Great Jones Street. For more information and a calendar of events, visit www.lamama.org/forum.
Poetic and brutal, "Boat for Dolls" invokes the fate of a female artist who, like the great heroines, treads along her own path, well apart from the well-trodden and secure social patterns, in search of her own identity and sense of being. She carries within herself her own miracle, but also her own demons. Her atypical life is bound to lead her to a point that every woman fears: that she will end up alone and that she will turn into the witch from a fairy tale. She moves through the cynical melodrama of Snow White, the satirical parable of Goldilocks, the expressionist tragedy of Kingdom of Darkness and the fantastic grotesque of Hansel and Gretel. All the time, her true and seeking spirit engages in an intimate confrontation with itself.
Traveling through different stages of life, the heroine takes on the identities of well-known fairy tale characters. Her life is not a fairy tale—it is not even especially nice—but painful life experiences strengthen her artistic determination. As Thumbelina, she is a student discussing her artwork with a professor Frog who stands on a staircase above her to illustrate the climb she must make and the ceiling above her. Along the way, her life is paraphrased through various other fairy tales. The Little Sister reveals her teenage adventurous spirit; Goldilocks reveals her disappointment in marriage. Ultimately, the once-famous artist is depicted as an alcoholic witch in her final stages, visited by Hansel and Gretel. Her life's tragedy is a failed search for a boat. In the first fairytale, "Alice" (referring to Alice in Wonderland) notices that her father has started to look at her 'differently.' She doesn't want to face the reality that her father is a pedophile, leaves home and never comes back, but the father figure stays with her to the end. He used to make small boats for her dolls. All her life, she seeks such a boat: a safe harbor in a calm sea.
Finding the matching archetypal model in every fairytale, author Milena Markovic makes obvious yet unobtrusive parallels with various everyday archetypes: the disoriented youth, the absent mother, the non-existing father, the unemotional in-laws, the users, the freaks, the overconfident youngsters and the insensitive crowds we live with trying to fight our way through our lives.
Songs by Darko Rundek, the noted Croatian rock singer, songwriter, poet, and actor, link the scenes from various periods in life of the heroine. There is an onstage band of flute, guitar, accordion, drums and double bass.
The production is mounted with a company of six actors, five musicians and eight crew members. The actors are Draginja Voganjac, Jasna Djuricic, Milica Grujicic, Nenad Pecinar, Radoje Cupic and Radovan Vujovic. Dramaturgs are Vuk Ršumovic and Svetislav Jovanov. Scenic design is by Ljerka Hribar. Costume Design is by Momirka Bailovic. Choreographer is Saša Krga. Masks and Make up are by Vladimir Radovanovic. Sound Design is by Marinko Vukmanovic. The performance is in Serbian with English subtitles.
Director Ana Tomovic graduated from the Belgrade Faculty of Dramatic Art Theatre and Radio Directing Department under tuteledge of Egon Savin. She had helmed over ten productions in Serbia before winning the Director Award at the Joakimfest in 2005 for "Duck" by Stella Feehily at the Kraljevo City Theatre. Her productions at National Theatre in Belgrade include "The Doll Ship" and "Ronald, Please Understand Me" by Filip Vujoševic.
La Mama E.T.C.'s Ellen Stewart Theatre is located at 66 East Fourth Street. The production runs Thursday through Saturday at 7:30 PM, Sunday at 2:30. Tickets are $25 general admission, $20 seniors and students. Box office (212) 475-7710, www.lamama.org. Runs 1:25. Critics are invited to all performances. Performed in Serbian with English subtitles.
Radoje Cupic and Jasna Djuricic.
Photo by Jonathan Slaff.
Orchestra of the play.
Photo by Adele Bossard.
Radoje Cupic, Radovan Vujovic, Draginja Voganjac, Jasna Djuricic.
Photo by Adele Bossard.
Radoje Cupic as Doc (of the Seven Dwarfs).
Photo by Adele Bossard.
The Nest: Jasna Djuricic and Nenad Pecinar.
Photo by Lee Wexler/Images for Innovation.
Goldilocks and the Three Bears, Radoje Cupic, Draginja Voganjac, Jasna Djuricic, and Radovan Vujovic.
Photo by Lee Wexler/Images for Innovation.
Radoje Cupic, Nenad Pecinar, Radovan Vujovic, and Jasna Djuricic.
Photo by Lee Wexler/Images for Innovation.
Jasna Djuricic, Milica Grujicic.
Photo by Jonathan Slaff.
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