class="">Three Sisters

Three Sisters

23 October | 19:00 – „I.L. Caragiale” National Theatre, Bucharest, Studio Hall

Chekhov’s Irina protests against self-delusion, a self-delusion that could become a way of life; she protests in the name of all persecuted Russian artists, who are opposing the bloodshed. The bustle of the daily rhythms, of the rhythms of our passions, ignites a fire. And hope emerges out of its ashes.

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By: A.P. Cehov Translated by: Raluca Rădulescu

Cast:

Andrei Prozorov: Emanuel Becheru

Natalia: Corina Grigoraș

Olga: Elena Popa

Masha: Nora Covali

Irina: Teodora Crișan

Kulyghin Fyodor: Daniel Beșleagă

Vershinin Aleksandr: Mircea Postelnicu

Tuzenbach Nikolaj: Valentin Florea

Solyony Vassily: Paul-Ovidiu Cosovanu

Chebutykin Ivan: Dragoș Ionescu

Fedotek: Florin Hrițcu

Rode: Iulia-Paula Niculescu

Anfisa: Loredana Grigoriu

Children: Mara Obreja and Ana-Sofia Dăscălescu

Directed by: Theodor-Cristian Popescu

Concept and set design: Velica Panduru

Set: Velica Panduru (coproducer of the set: Tukuma Works)

Costumes: Sabina Reus

Choreography: Flavia Giurgiu

Original music: Andrei Raicu

Light design: Cristian Niculescu

Sound design: Andrei Raicu

Producer: Piatra Neamț Theatre of Youth

Recommended age: 16+

Duration: 2h 30min (one interval)

In Romanian with English surtitles

How will future generations look at us? What will they think of the way we lived? What is the meaning of it all? Chekhovian characters like to ask themselves such questions. And to express the anticipation of a significant change, coming soon, like a whirlwind.

But how can they pretend not to see? Not to see, on a small scale, the wide array of petty gestures around, but especially on a larger scale, the actions their country is undertaking? (Theodor-Cristian Popescu, director)

When we started the creative process for this show, we wondered what the characters’ path would be by using the filter of current political events, as related to the situation of the war in Ukraine.

Why would Irina want to go to Moscow? To mount resistance? To be the voice of her generation that does not submit to silence? Irina becomes the image of the women who protested peacefully, holding white flowers or blank sheets of paper, and who were arrested in Moscow.

Today, in the world we live in, surrounded by wars, it is necessary to have a position when we approach topics such as those in Chekhov’s texts, for example, to update history through our conceptual and artistic filters, analyzing the present. (Velica Panduru, set designer)

Photos: Velica Panduru, Sabina Reus