Letzte Station Torgau. Eine kalte Umarmung (UA)
Freital, Groß Leuthen, Wittenberg, Burg – these place  names are tied to lasting memories for many people. But they aren’t memories of  clean countryside air or sightseeing castles: These were the locations of  “Jugendwerkhöfe” of the GDR’s youth welfare system, places intended to make  those who were deemed in the language of the system to have “behavioural  problems” more compliant with real socialist society. Sometimes simply refusing  to become a member of the FDJ, the Free German Youth, was reason enough to be  institutionalised. 
Using disciplining methods imported from the Soviet Union, the spirit of collectivism was hammered into the young people. Physical and mental violence were daily occurrences, culminating in the feared “explosion method”.
Many of the people affected had already undergone an odyssey through other, equally humiliating kinds of institutions before they were sent to the Jugendwerkhof, spending nearly their entire childhood and youth in the system of forced education. Others were collected with no warning and sent on random trips of several days, with the ultimate destination kept secret until the end.
Under the disguising term of “work education”, inmates were trained as “unskilled labourers” for a pittance – which means that they were exploited as part of a system of forced labour. Among their products were components for self-assembly furniture for major Western corporations – which brought valuable foreign currency for the workers-and-farmers-state of the GDR and allowed the “free world” to enjoy their cosy living-atmosphere at a low cost.
Those who had enough courage defied the institution in small and larger ways – from secret parties which brought severe sanctions if discovered, all the way to escape attempts which were doomed to end up with a return to the institution sooner or later. And over all of this, one name hovered as a threat against repeated misdemeanour: Torgau. This was the location of the “Geschlossener Jugendwerkhof”, a closed institution, the final resort which no longer concealed the reality of what the entire system of homes was: a prison those who wouldn’t or couldn’t participate.
Regine Dura and Hans-Werner Kroesinger have worked together since the year 2000 and are among the eminent creators of contemporary documentary theatre. They integrate reports by contemporary witnesses and documents into concentrated and multi-layered texts. They have worked both internationally and at German-language theatres including Berlin’s HAU, Maxim Gorki Theater Berlin, Staatstheater Karlsruhe and Landestheater Linz. At Schauspiel Leipzig, they looked back on the history of brown coal mining in the region of Leipzig in their 2020 work “Brennende Erde”.
				
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                    Using disciplining methods imported from the Soviet Union, the spirit of collectivism was hammered into the young people. Physical and mental violence were daily occurrences, culminating in the feared “explosion method”.
Many of the people affected had already undergone an odyssey through other, equally humiliating kinds of institutions before they were sent to the Jugendwerkhof, spending nearly their entire childhood and youth in the system of forced education. Others were collected with no warning and sent on random trips of several days, with the ultimate destination kept secret until the end.
Under the disguising term of “work education”, inmates were trained as “unskilled labourers” for a pittance – which means that they were exploited as part of a system of forced labour. Among their products were components for self-assembly furniture for major Western corporations – which brought valuable foreign currency for the workers-and-farmers-state of the GDR and allowed the “free world” to enjoy their cosy living-atmosphere at a low cost.
Those who had enough courage defied the institution in small and larger ways – from secret parties which brought severe sanctions if discovered, all the way to escape attempts which were doomed to end up with a return to the institution sooner or later. And over all of this, one name hovered as a threat against repeated misdemeanour: Torgau. This was the location of the “Geschlossener Jugendwerkhof”, a closed institution, the final resort which no longer concealed the reality of what the entire system of homes was: a prison those who wouldn’t or couldn’t participate.
Regine Dura and Hans-Werner Kroesinger have worked together since the year 2000 and are among the eminent creators of contemporary documentary theatre. They integrate reports by contemporary witnesses and documents into concentrated and multi-layered texts. They have worked both internationally and at German-language theatres including Berlin’s HAU, Maxim Gorki Theater Berlin, Staatstheater Karlsruhe and Landestheater Linz. At Schauspiel Leipzig, they looked back on the history of brown coal mining in the region of Leipzig in their 2020 work “Brennende Erde”.
                            Premiere on 11.03.2023
Diskothek
                        
                        
                                                                        Diskothek
Dates
Further dates in planningDuration
ca. 2:00, no breakStrobe lighting is used in this production.
Cast
Nicole Widera as alternating cast for Teresa Schergaut (from January 2024)
                                    
                                Team
Director: Hans-Werner Kroesinger, Regine Dura
                                    Concept and text: Regine Dura
                                    Music: Jonas Marc Anton Wehner / Warm Graves
                                    Stage and costume design: Hugo Gretler
                                    Dramaturgy: Georg Mellert
                                    Light: Mattheo Fehse
                                    Video: Fabian Polinski
                                    Sound: Udo Schulze, Gregory Weis
                                    Theatre pedagogy: Rosa Preiß
                                Extended Team
Assistant Stage Design & Costume: Arabella Marsh-Hilfiker
                                    Stage Manager: Jens Glanze
                                    Prompter: Philine von Engelhardt
                                    Assistant to the Director: Emily Huber
                                    Make-Up: Anja Engert
                                    Props: Thomas Weinhold
                                    Stage Master: Thomas Kalz
                                    Intern Dramaturgy & director: Sophie Albrecht, Vincent Koch
                                    Intern Stage & Costume Design: Charlotte Kaiser
                                














 
                            
