ARTS - Politics & Theatre with Nancy Bishop
Guest: Nancy Bishop, CSA and Emmy-Nominated Casting Director. And also a Theatre Director.
Theatre has always been an important part of Czech culture and national identity, often being used in subversive ways to undermine those who would dominate them. Nancy Bishop takes us all the way back to 1620 up though Havel and the Velvet Revolution, when Czech theatre has its ultimate triumph: a playwright becomes president!
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SECTIONS
02:12 - A Personal Connection and a Petition
04:11 - White Mountain and the Suppression of the Czech Language
06:53 - Czech Makes Inroads in the 18th Century, Count Nostitz and the Estates Theatre
09:26 - Czech and Irish Parallels, the 19th Century and the early Czech-Language Theatre
12:25 - The National Theatre - More Than a Building, Working Under the Radar, The Nazis Press German (Again)
14:25 - The Communists, the Counter-Charter and Theatre as Samizdat
16:47 - Theatre Under the Communists, and Havel's Take on Absurdism
23:46 - After the Prague Spring and Normalization
25:00 - The Velvet Revolution and Theatres as Places of Political Action
Slip of the Tongue: František Palacký did not, in fact, attend the grand opening of the National Theatre in 1881, as he had died in 1876. But he was involved with it until his death.
Make sure to check out Nancy's website, workshops, books and more:
Other places mention in this episode:
For events in Prague, go to the Facebook page The Prague Haps
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