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Polish Theatre in Warsaw
Teatr Polski in Warsaw is one of the most important theatres
in Poland. Its founding act says that the theatre was set up "for
the benefi t, glory and development of the Polish stagecraft and
to popularise the beauty of our mother language". This idea has
set the path of creative freedom of the theatre’s directors from
its establishment until now. In 2013, Teatr Polski in Warsaw
celebrates its 100th anniversary.
The theatre was opened on 29 January 1913 with the premiere
of “Irydion” by Zygmunt Krasiński. Against the odds of the
crisis, unfavourable political situation and disapproval of the
Warsaw theatre community, Arnold Szyfman, holder of a PhD
in philosophy, a beginner playwright with almost no experience
and grand dreams of a modern dramatic theatre, managed
to convince representatives of the elite to follow his bold idea.
Funds for building the theatre, called the New Polish Theatre
at that time, were raised quickly. Organisational work took two
years, the theatre was modelled on the best theatres in Europe.
The building, designed by architect Czesław Przybylski, was built
in less than nine months. It was one of the largest and most
beautiful theatre buildings in Warsaw. Its equipment was very
modern: an auditorium with 1,000 seats, a revolving stage,
a mechanical fl yloft and a panoramic drop, which provided
unprecedented production possibilities.
Subsequent directors of Teatr Polski in Warsaw consequently
aimed at creating a distinguished individual style of Polish
theatre art. The direction was set by Szyfman himself. He built
an excellent, permanent team encompassing many outstanding
names and talents: Andrycz, Barszczewska, Broniszówna,
Ćwiklińska, Smosarska, Bodo, Dymsza, Jaracz, Junosza-Stępowski,
Kreczmar, Węgrzyn, Zelwerowicz, and after the World War 2:
Fijewski, Gogolewski, Hańcza, Jasiukiewicz, Wołłejko. Director
Szyfman placed great emphasis on the quality of the repertoire
and stage production, which was not so obvious in the 1920s
and 1930s as it is now. In Teatr Polski, the play directors were
inter alia Schiller, Zelwerowicz, Solski, and after 1945: Bardini,
Hanuszkiewicz, Korzeniewski, Wierciński. The core repertoire
consisted of Polish and world classics; contemporary European
drama was bravely popularised. Szyfman established stage
design workshops where distinguished painters, such as Karol
Frycz and Wincenty Drabik, trained generations of high-class
theatre craftsmen. With Szyfman as the director, Teatr Polski
in Warsaw gained the status of the best theatre in Poland. It set
the standards of contemporary theatre art and the national style.
Teatr Polski attracted particular interest again when Kazimierz
Dejmek became its director. He turned out a reformer measuring
up to Szyfman. Dejmek became the director in 1981 and ran
the theatre for 14 years. At that time, the theatre once again
became a part of the great history of European theatre. Teatr Polski
vividly responded to the transformations taking place in Poland
in the 1980s. Dejmek staged premieres of plays by Iredyński
and adaptations of prose by Hłasko and Krzysztoń. Teatr Polski
staged nine plays by Sławomir Mrożek, including three world
premieres: “Ambassador,” “Contract” and “Portrait,” and one Polish
premiere “A Summer’s Day.” The team of actors was expanded
to include: Rachwalska, Mikołajska, Seniuk, Dmochowski, Englert,
Łomnicki, Mrożewski, Szczepkowski, Łabonarska, Holoubek
and Łapicki who later became the director of Teatr Polski.
The canon of Polish classics was enriched by old Polish plays
adapted and directed by Dejmek – they made their way into the
history of Polish theatre. The stage designers were: Pankiewicz,
Polewska, Kossakowska, Kreutz-Majewski. General opinion was
that with Dejmek as the director, the theatre performed the tasks
of the National Theatre in terms of the quality and importance
of performances.
Since January 2011, the theatre’s general director has been
Andrzej Seweryn. Drawing on his 20-years’ experience in
Comédie-Française, he introduces Teatr Polski to the new century.
Patrycja Anna Mikłasz-Pisula
Teatr Polski in Warsaw