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A DOLL'S HOUSE
by Henrik Ibsen
International Ibsen Stage Festival 2004, Oslo
Nationaltheatret, Malersalen
1 - 2 September 2004
Rosemary Branch Theatre
25 - 29 August 2004
Translated, Directed and Designed by Terje Tveit
Lighting Design by Finnuala McNulty
| Cast (in order of appearance): |
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| Nora Helmer |
Sarah Head |
| Torvald Helmer |
William Rowsey |
| Kristina Linde |
Sanna Stellan |
| Dr Rank |
Paul Engers |
| Nils Krogstad |
Matthew Rutherford |
The 2004 International Ibsen Stage Festival - the 10th Festival
The former artistic director of the National Theatre, Stein Winge, initiated the first
International Ibsen Stage Festival at Nationaltheatret in the autumn of 1990. It was an annual
event for the first four years, later being staged every second year.
The 10th International Ibsen Stage Festival was the largest since 1996. With 12 guest
performances chosen from 120 different Ibsen productions worldwide, 6 Doll's Houses, 5 in-house
productions and an array of other activities, the Ibsen Festival 2004 was the most comprehensive
festival to this day representing the National Theatre's first warm-up to the Ibsen Year of 2006.
The National Theatre aimed to present a full spectrum of interpretations that can be found of
Ibsen's plays. Having searched for simplicity, creativity and the artistically sublime the festival
presented a mixed programme of selected guest performances from the most influential institutions
in European theatre as well as their own five in-house productions. Prominent foreign directors
invited to this year's festival included Sebastian Hartmann, Thomas Ostermeier, Stephan Kimmig and
Stéphane Braunschweig.
An important strategic element in the planning of this year's festival was to establish a solid
base for the best possible festival in the Ibsen year of 2006.
In his opening address at the festival in 1990, president Vytautas Landsbergis of Lithuania
stressed the importance of the International Ibsen Stage Festival for the freedom of speech and
the international cultural work. The subsequent festivals have all fully shown that the works of
Ibsen communicate with people of all cultures and walks of life. Practically all of those who have
opened the festival or have been its guests of honour have commented on the theatre as a means of
understanding cultural diversities. Among those who have expressed this view are Liv Ullmann,
Vaclav Havel, Thorvald Stoltenberg, Åse Kleveland, Ellen Horn, Vigdís Finnbogadóttir, Lars Roar
Langslet and HRH Crown Prince Haakon, the patron of the International Ibsen Stage Festival.
During the previous nine festivals productions from the following countries have visited
Nationaltheatret:: Bosnia, United Kingdom (England, Wales and Northern Ireland), Greece, Germany,
Poland, Czech Republic, Italy, France, Sweden, Finland, China, Pakistan, the Netherlands,
Burkina Faso, New Zealand, Lithuania, Canada, Russia, USA, Armenia, Denmark, Israel and Palestine.
Link
to the National Theatre's website www.nationaltheatret.no
What the Critics said:
"Show earns international recognition. …Using a cast of five
and a simple set giving a distinctive visual signature through the
use of Christmassy green and red, director Terje Tveit presents Ibsen's characters in raw,
direct terms. The erotic charge between Sarah Head's initially coquettish
Nora and her husband Torvald (William Rowsey) is played as convincingly
as I have ever seen it - something that makes his eventual betrayal
the more powerful. A uniformly strong and committed cast is on-stage
throughout, lending a palpable weight to the sense of the claustrophobic
convention that ultimately judges Nora so harshly. Tveit doesn't allow
the mood to become oppressively introspective, however, dialogue fairly
rattles between the characters. Visually and audibly distinctive (Christmas
carols, strangely, serve to emphasize the Nordic gloom), and with
an energy that produces believable characters rather than mere ciphers,
this Doll's House is a local production that has thoroughly deserved
its international recognition."
Camden New Journal
"A stylized and dramatic doll's house. … Was Nora's Christmas
really only a bad dream? Perhaps not, but Dale Teater Kompani from
London has discovered similarities, turning "A Doll's House" into
a romantic tale that develops into a nightmare. The realism both in
gesticulation, facial expression and way of speaking is gone, replaced
by song, dance and a dramatic lighting design. This way they bring
out a new take on "A Doll's House". … The five actors are present
on the stage throughout. When not taking part in the action, they
remain in the background and act as a chorus, elves or children. Nora
is left in the middle of the stage. As the only character she looks
out into the audience and is thus stepping out of the story - transformed
into the observer of a dream. The darkness on stage, red lighting,
Christmas carols and repeated whispering only emphasize the dreamlike
aspect of the production. When Nora finally realizes the difficulty
of the situation thrown upon her; when every way out is blocked, the
dream develops into a claustrophobic nightmare. The actors perform
with incredible energy and Christmas carols, dancing and lines are
delivered with exaggerated theatricality. Nora is given a light voice
and gives the impression of a small girl, Dr Rank is kind old uncle
and Nora's husband, Helmer, is amenable and mild - a quality rarely
seen in the character. The costumes and set design carry elements
of bright red or green; the rest is moss-green, brown or black, which
gives the overall feeling of a fairy-tale. … Terje Tveit and Dale
Teater Kompani's take in making "A Doll's House" unreal and nightmarish
is a fruitful idea bringing out interesting aspects in the text. …
Stylized and anti-realistic - a theatrical nightmare at Christmas."
Dagsavisen
"This year's Ibsen Festival gave us several distinctive productions
of "A Doll's House" - one from heavy-political Berlin, a cold Hamburg
production, entertainment from New York and Terje Tveit's singing
Doll's House from London, exotic Katmandu and equally exotic Bergen.
Let's face it - the drama from 1879 is still able to fascinate its
audiences. … A noticeable trait seems to be a renewed interest in
the male characters of "A Doll's House". In Terje Tveit's production
we are approaching a new understanding of Krogstad's situation. The
traditional bitter opportunist is here portrayed as a wounded man,
who is still able to reconcile himself with his past and has the courage
to move on, without reservations, when love is staring him in the
face. … This year's Ibsen Festival does not suggest the deceased apothecary's
apprentice will stop entertaining us with his serious observations."
Bergens Tidende
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Photos from A Doll's House
















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