JAHRESTAGE (Anniversaries). Part One
With a reading of Uwe Johnson’s “Jahrestage” as the  point of departure, director-in-residence Anna-Sophie Mahler sets out on a research  excursion into the 20th century. The director and her team take an  investigative journey towards the author and his novel of the century. What is  the history lurking behind the story? History as well as stories about a  disjointed century and a family disjointed by war and time, whose centre  remains mysterious and sealed-off, somewhere between Mecklenburg and New York City.  
Every morning, Gesine Cresspahl opens her newspaper outside the subway entrance. Every day over the course of a year, she makes an entry into her book, starting with a quote from the New York Times, the paper that provides daily, matter of fact coverage of wars and global upheavals from around the world. Across the muffled screams of a troubled era, the narrator descends into the quiet of memory. Memories of tempestuous anniversaries that show parallels with the present ones and are still different. The memories take on a life of their own, a character enters and exits, traversing into another time on the other side of the ocean. Through the urgent questions of the daughter and a new generation, memories acquire a new currency, surrounded by the noise of New York in the epochal year of 1967/68, in the midst of the Vietnam War and the student protests. What unfolds is a copious panorama of German-German 20th century history, a journey into the eventful New York present of the year 1968 – and at the same time, the story of a family. Stories of life in Mecklenburg during the Weimar Republic, during the time of the National Socialist regime, the Soviet occupied zone and the first years of the GDR resound and ebb away again.
How strongly do these recently concluded chapters resound in our present times? How do you process, sort and tell a story from a supposedly safe position – this complicated, interwoven family story full of cracks and subsidence in the face of a future that was as insecure in the old times as it is now? Feelings of the world’s fragmentation, of overload as well as the impossibility of illusion and utopian dreams arise. Do these continual experiences of upheaval even allow us to believe in stability?
Director-in-residence Anna-Sophie Mahler studied directing at the Hanns Eisler School of Music in Berlin. Her artistic interest is mainly focussed on experimental, and especially documentary, forms of musical theatre. She has worked as a drama and opera director at theatres including Theater Bremen, Münchner Kammerspiele or Deutsche Oper Berlin. Since 2006, she has also been working in the field of documentary theatre with her independent company CapriConnection. At Schauspiel Leipzig, she has previously staged “Eriopis – Medeas überlebende Tochter erzählt alles”, “La Bohème. Träume // Leipzig“ and “Undine”.
				
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                    Every morning, Gesine Cresspahl opens her newspaper outside the subway entrance. Every day over the course of a year, she makes an entry into her book, starting with a quote from the New York Times, the paper that provides daily, matter of fact coverage of wars and global upheavals from around the world. Across the muffled screams of a troubled era, the narrator descends into the quiet of memory. Memories of tempestuous anniversaries that show parallels with the present ones and are still different. The memories take on a life of their own, a character enters and exits, traversing into another time on the other side of the ocean. Through the urgent questions of the daughter and a new generation, memories acquire a new currency, surrounded by the noise of New York in the epochal year of 1967/68, in the midst of the Vietnam War and the student protests. What unfolds is a copious panorama of German-German 20th century history, a journey into the eventful New York present of the year 1968 – and at the same time, the story of a family. Stories of life in Mecklenburg during the Weimar Republic, during the time of the National Socialist regime, the Soviet occupied zone and the first years of the GDR resound and ebb away again.
How strongly do these recently concluded chapters resound in our present times? How do you process, sort and tell a story from a supposedly safe position – this complicated, interwoven family story full of cracks and subsidence in the face of a future that was as insecure in the old times as it is now? Feelings of the world’s fragmentation, of overload as well as the impossibility of illusion and utopian dreams arise. Do these continual experiences of upheaval even allow us to believe in stability?
Director-in-residence Anna-Sophie Mahler studied directing at the Hanns Eisler School of Music in Berlin. Her artistic interest is mainly focussed on experimental, and especially documentary, forms of musical theatre. She has worked as a drama and opera director at theatres including Theater Bremen, Münchner Kammerspiele or Deutsche Oper Berlin. Since 2006, she has also been working in the field of documentary theatre with her independent company CapriConnection. At Schauspiel Leipzig, she has previously staged “Eriopis – Medeas überlebende Tochter erzählt alles”, “La Bohème. Träume // Leipzig“ and “Undine”.
                            Premiere on 18.03.2023
Dernière on 04.05.2024
Große Bühne
                        
                        
                                                                        
                                                Dernière on 04.05.2024
Große Bühne
Duration
ca. 2:50, one breakStrobe lighting is used in this production.
Cast
Sonja Isemer as Gesine Cresspahl
                                    Paula Vogel as Marie Cresspahl
                                    Thomas Braungardt as New York Times / Uwe Johnson
                                    
                                    Paulina Bittner as Lisbeth Papenbrock, später Cresspahl
                                    Andreas Keller as Albert Papenbrock / De Rosny
                                    Bettina Schmidt as Louise Papenbrock / Schwester Magdalena
                                    Denis Petković as Horst Papenbrock / D.E. (Dietrich Erichson)
                                Live-Music
Michael Wilhelmi, Martin Wenk 
                                Team
Director: Anna-Sophie Mahler
                                    Script and concept: Falk Rößler
                                    Stage Design & Costume: Katrin Connan
                                    Music: Michael Wilhelmi, Martin Wenk
                                    Dramaturg: Benjamin Große
                                    Sounddesign: Albrecht Ziepert, Rafał Stachowiak / Stachy
                                    Light: Carsten Rüger
                                    Theatre pedagogy: Amelie Gohla
                                Extended Team
Video: Kai Schadeberg
                                    Sound: Anko Ahlert
                                    Stage Manager: Ute Neas
                                    Prompter: Christiane Wittig
                                    Assistant to the Director: Johannes Preißler
                                    Assistant stage design: Stella Vollmer
                                    Assistant costume design: Carolin Schmelz
                                    Make-Up: Cordula Kreuter, Julia Markow, Ute Markow
                                    Props: André Sproete
                                    Stage Master: Patrick Ernst
                                    Intern Dramaturgy: Juliane Knopik, Tabea Papritz
                                    Intern Costume: Mona Hamman
                                    Intern stage design: Ahn Phoung-Anh Pham
                                















 
                            
