10th Theatre Olympics: 550 performances in 70 venues in Budapest and all over Hungary

From Easter to Midsummer’s night, Budapest and Hungary will become a celebratory meeting point for the theatrical world. 200 companies from 35 countries will come to Hungary between 1stApril and 1stJuly 2023 forthe10th International Theatre Olympics. The theatres in Budapest and all over Hungary will join the Hungarian Olympics; and they will host one production from abroad and one from a trans border Hungarian theatre–the choice of which is up to them. In this way, the Hungarian-language theatres of Hungary’s neighbouring countries can be part of the Olympics, and the invitation of international companies can create long-term partnerships for Hungarian theatres.

The now-launched website of the 10th Theatre Olympiad already offers a selection of programmes, including drama, music, dance, children’s, and youth performance. In the following weeks, more and more productions will become available to the public. For more information on the programmes and news about the theatre festival, visit here…

Major Olympic sites include the National Theatre of Miskolc, celebratingthe200th anniversaryof its foundation, and the city of Debrecen, organiser of a contemporary Hungarian theatre festival. ISTA (International School of Theatre Anthropology) is a workshop in Pécsvárad under the intellectual supervision of Eugenio Barba. Hungarian puppet theatres and dance artists will also participate in the Olympics with their nationwide programmes. The programme includes street theatre spectacles as well as trade events: book launches, workshops, masterclasses, exhibitions and conferences. The  sacred aspect of the Olympic programme will include passion-plays.

Festivals within the festival

The main events of the Olympics will take place at the 9th Madách International Theatre Meeting, MITEM, at the National Theatre in Budapest. The success of MITEM led the International Theatre Olympics Committee to entrust the National Theatre and Attila Vidnyánszky with the organisation of the 2023 Olympics.

At Hungary’s largest theatre festival, Hungarian audiences will be able to experience the work of such theatre giants as Theodoros TerzopoulosTadashiSuzukiRomeo CastellucciSlava PoluninHeiner GoebbelsEugenio BarberAlessandro SerraLiu Lib in and Declan Donnellan.

“Since its foundation in 2014, MITEM has been organised in thespiritof dialogue, openness and curiosity. These times of crisis make it even more important to save our values via the imaginary ark of the theatre. Culture helps maintain the bridges of dialogue that politics destroys.”– said Attila Vidnyánszky, director of National Theatre, Budapest.

There will also be puppetry and dance festivals, and the Budapest Operetta Theatre, which is 100 years old this year, will also host a festival. The alternative arts scene is represented, among others, by the Jurányi House and the Bethlen SquareTheatre. The National Theatre of Győr brings together theatres across the Danube. There will also be festivals for amateur artists and student actors.

Focus on the Madách Imre’s bicentenary

The focus of the Olympics will be on Imre Madách, one of the greatest Hungarian dramatists, born 200 years ago in 1823, whose major work, The Tragedy of Man, a masterpiece comparable to Goethe’s Faust, premièred 140 years ago. Madách’s work will be presented not only through conferences and new books, but also in a unique performance. Theatre school teams from all over the world will perform excerpts from The Tragedy of Man, and then put them together in a large joint production. The slogan of the2023 Theatre Olympics comes from The Tragedy of Man“O Man, strive on, strive on, have faith; and trust!”

Theatre Olympics founder about Hungary

Theodoros Terzopulos, founder of the Theatre Olympics and chairman of the international committee, explains why Hungary was chosen for the10th event:

“Because Hungary, with its great and far-reaching theatrical traditions, has been taking an active part in the global developments in the field of theatre practice and theory. Budapest, a beautiful and unique monument of the world’s cultural heritage, is an international cultural metropolis ready to build bridges connecting other theatrical traditions. Well-staffed with talented and experienced artistic, technical and administrative experts, the National Theatre is the institutional hub of Hungarian theatre that is as open to avant-garde international theatrical proposals as it is to upholding the principles of tradition. Thus it is well-placed to build new bridges between different schools and Stage languages. In this day and age when homogenization of the theatre is the prevailing trend, the National Theatre, whose motto is reconciliation and New Humanism, embraces diversity tolerance and multiculturalism.”

Symbol and the artist’s job

The symbol of the 10th Theatre Olympics is an ark. To use a biblical parallel, we can board this ark to save ourselves and our values. Where to? The organizers hope: to a peaceful future. In Europe, our neighbour is at war. Major powers and small countries are threatening to use nuclear weapons. The question then arises: what is the artists’ job? Is there a need for art? Are cultural events like the Theatre Olympics justified in such times? The artists organising the 10th Theatre Olympics hope that they can protect and, where necessary, rebuild the bridges destroyed by politics. To do so, we need sobriety and moderation, faith in the future and trust in each other. And above all: to maintain dialogue. And this is only possible if artists and cultural representatives do not speak the language of politics and power, but strive for dialogue. Dialogue with the Ukrainian theatre artists who, because of the war, cannot be present at the 2023 Olympics, and we will keep the opportunity to be included in the programme open for them till the last minute. But we are also seeking dialogue with the artists of Russia, a major theatrical power of the world, the country of Chekhov, Stanislavsky, Meyerhold, Lyubimov, Vysotsky and Vasilyev. Let us hope they, too, will be back inthe circulation of the theatre as soon as possible.

To find out more about the Theatre Olympics, visit here…

Written by Theatrefullstop