currenthwa.blogg.se

Ivo van hove tartuffe
Ivo van hove tartuffe













ivo van hove tartuffe ivo van hove tartuffe

Among his numerous awards he has received a Tony Award and a Laurence Olivier Award for A View from the Bridge.

ivo van hove tartuffe ivo van hove tartuffe

On Broadway, he has directed revival productions of Arthur Miller's A View from the Bridge, and The Crucible (both in 2015), Lee Hall's Network in 2018, and Leonard Bernstein and Stephen Sondheim's West Side Story in 2020. Like many of Molière’s comedies, Tartuffe is a social drama.Ivo van Hove (born 28 October 1958) is a Belgian theatre director known as the artistic director of Toneelgroep Amsterdam in the Netherlands and for his Off-Broadway avant-garde experimental theatre productions. Ivo van Hove does not forget that Tartuffe is a beggar who “is attributed the role of saviour and man of piety by Orgon, who finds in him a confidant and a spiritual master” so much so that, in order to “seal this unique bond, he decides to make Tartuffe his sole heir. It focuses on Tartuffe’s passionate relationship with the rich Orgon’s young second wife, the conflict between father and son and the opposition between Cléante’s progressive and libertine vision of the world and the conservative one espoused by Orgon and his mother. He has chosen this energetic, if not to say frenzied version of the play, which focuses on the crisis Tartuffe sets off when he enters the life of a rich family that is falling apart. This production marks Ivo van Hove’s reunion with the Troupe, which he worked with for his stagings of Les Damnés and Électre/Oreste, but it is also a reunion with Molière, whose Le Misanthrope and L’Avare he has already staged, but whom he is directing for the first time in France. The play we have known ever since, Le Tartuffe ou l’Imposteur, is a modified version dating from 1669, with a gentler pace and extended to five acts, whereas the first one comprised only three acts. It has been reconstructed thanks to the work of ‘theatrical genetics’ carried out by the historian Georges Forestier, who explains that this Tartuffe was censored by Louis XIV as the latter could not, on the one hand, be the champion of Catholic orthodoxy and, on the other, allow his favourite actor-author to perform this satire of false piety in his Parisian theatre. A jobseeker - Beneficiary of welfare support.















Ivo van hove tartuffe