The following article appears in Estonian cultural magazine Sirp.
Estonian readers can view it here in their beautiful language: http://www.sirp.ee/s1-artiklid/teater/eesti-ajalugu-teater-having/
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Estonian
History + Theatre = Disaster
an
outsider view of DRAAMA 2018
I went into the 2018 DRAAMA festival as
an idiot, knowing almost nothing about Estonian history, theatre, people, and
culture. The experience was (therefore) full of surprises: the
higher-than-expected cost of living, the local politeness, a 10pm alcohol-purchasing
limit… at every street corner of Tartu I was met with something I didn’t
expect. These surprises could be very good, such as experiencing a sauna on the
Emajõgi, or hearing for the first time the quiet beauty of the sung Estonian
language. They could also be, well, not-so-positive. And the Estonia 100 theatre
series ‘Tale of the Century’ – a set of 13 works, each addressing one decade of
the Estonian Republic’s history – threw up plenty of the latter. Commissioned 5
years ago, these projects made up the bulk of the English-language programme of
this year’s DRAAMA, and provided many discussion points for members of the
Baltic Forum (such as myself) who came from the Baltics and beyond to get a
sense of Estonian theatre practice.
The decision to programme shows expressly
to celebrate the founding of Estonian Independence must itself be called into
question. Many artists seemed to grapple with their new function as advocates
of Estonian identity, creating works that were, at best, confused by the brief,
and at worst flirted with something close to nationalism. All the while,
aesthetic experimentation seemed to take a seat in the second row. The latest
work from NO99, NO34 Revolution, successfully continued (or
re-started) the company’s experiments with movement and innovative dramaturgies,
taking the transformative period of the 1910s as a counterpoint to our cynical
perspective on revolution today. The opera Estonian History: A Nation Born of Shock
(Estonian National Opera and Kanuti
Gildi SAAL) managed to develop some new aesthetic proposals
from the clash of its form and the extensive historical research (from the 13-plus
members of the research team). The end result was an unexpected experiment that
produced its own type of formal shock, largely through the use of speech,
comedy, and silence.
NO99's NO34 Revolution. Photo: Tiit Ojasoo
Several shows in the programme seemed
to understand the magnitude of historical representation to mean the
production of large-scale works. While notable for their ambition, shows such
as BB at Night (Von Krahl Theatre and Tartu New Theatre) and Before Us, the Deluge (NUKU and Vaba Lava) seemed to
overcompensate, generating huge, impressive, production-heavy shows which might
be more suited to national celebrations in Russia or China. In both cases, the
shows themselves achieved their goals – creating types of ‘total theatre’ in
the form of multi-faceted and comprehensive theatre texts. However, they left
little in the way of openness, and, on both counts, almost no room for
interpretation. In the worst cases, the brief of representing a whole decade of
a nation brought with it a kind of anti-experimental attitude, such as in The Mistress of the Raven’s Stone (Endla Theatre and Kuressaare City Theatre) – again
an entirely successful show, it just seemed to be written in the late 19th
century, even as it addressed the period of the 1950s.
The exception to this aesthetic trend is
Journeys: Promised Land (Soltumatu Tantsu Lava) – a small
show in production, but one that sticks out for the experimental nature of its
approach. Rather than attempt to deal with the entire 1920s, performer Kadri
Noormets addresses a specific as a metaphor for the whole: an Estonian
migration event to Brazil. The performance doesn’t trade in massive production
values, dealing instead in exchange and negotiation with the audience: its
currency is nothing less than your own agency as spectator. In this, the
performance goes into a brave new world, departing from the historical roots of
the chosen frame, and reflecting on migration as a particular mode of human (Estonian)
experience. Noormets channels the improvisational energy necessary to migrating
– encountering, as it does, the unknown – into a kind of live decision-making
and joint exploration with the audience. The result could be seen to generalise
the source event, but it instead works to magnify its material through a
process of abstraction, bringing us closer to its subject through radical human
connection than a historical analysis ever could.