Saturday, April 30, 2011

Palaces, War and Vitamin D

looking across the melted Neva at the Hermitage
the Hermitage, one of our "neighbors"
bear hanging out at Hermitage
We are about half way through our time here. Being this far north is such a treat this time of year as the sun is staying with us until past 10:00 pm already.  A daily baptism of Vitamin D.  The mood lifts, the skin is grateful. By 9:00 it's a pink light that is just so surreal. White Nights are on the way...we've been excited by the green grass, flowers, birds and tree buds.  Also the public clean up has been impressive.  Daniel reports "at school, we never get to play outside in winter time but we get to play outside at spring time!  We are also going to be gardening starting next week".  The boys have the next two Monday's off from school for May Day and May 9th which is Day of Victory (WW II).  There will be parades with tanks etc and that should be interesting.  One not so great thing about spring here is the mosquitoes.  Both boys have been bitten and Sasha had his school mates convinced he had chicken pox (Mission: to be sent home early. Result: thwarted by mom).

Boys eating Ice Cream at the Hermitage on an early spring day
As I walk around town, I am truly awed by the architecture.  The grandness. The colors and design.  Now that the canals are melted and flowing one can truly imagine life a hundred years ago.  Russians are funny about public life.  The boys are both concerned about how "cold" Russians seem in public.  We've tried to get them to stop calling it "mean" as it really is just a different performance of self in public. There is no pressure to smile here at strangers.  There is also a tendency to speak quietly when outside, something we are NOT good at. So, we are often the loudest, weirdest, smiliest people on the street, just letting our American freak flag fly.  I have stopped being in any way embarrassed although I will not dare to speak for Volodya on that.  We went on a trip to the aquarium here and it was great fun.  The boys were impressed.  The fact is, most Russian museums for children are still sort of old school compared to those in America where "interactive" is old news and expected. The Aquarium and one other small science museum we found are exceptions. Clean, well lit, and planned, they were both a treat.
Volodya, sister Lena and Mama Ludmilla

We celebrated Easter with the family. Sadly, on Easter morning I badly scalded myself with boiling coffee in an accident involving a French Press and apparently too many coffee grounds.  The result was 2nd degree burns on chest, belly and wrist. Terrifying I must say.  All healing now but the wounds have been slow to mend in some spots.  Other than that, Easter was fun.  Russian's have, since the fall of Soviet Union, become more "religious". It's only in quotes because Volodya feels at least some of it is simply fashion, not a Great Awakening. But anyway, every other person wears a cross now, something that would have been "frowned upon" 20 years ago.   I want to visit the synagogue but am told its quite orthodox and for a woman alone it might be tricky. The Jewish story here is still something that deeply saddens me. 

our students at the Academy being weird
We have finished our class with the student group at the Academy except for an "Open Lecture/Demonstration" we will present to interested students and faculty on May 17th.  I have really enjoyed this group of students and their hunger for working in this new way.  I have fantasies of bringing them to America next summer for some cultural exchange with my UMN students.  They have so much to teach each other and I'd love to facilitate that kind of meeting. Indeed it was such an exchange that led me here in the first place so I know it's value first hand.

some of my class of faculty. Igor is far right
Zhenia, our babysitter!
a bridge near Nevsky Prospekt
The class with the faculty has been great but more difficult due to more entrenched habits in the teachers (of course) and a more varied skill set physically.  But there is a core group of them who have been amazing to meet. In fact, one of them, Igor will be playing Marinetti in our show in May (replacing the irreplaceable Stephen Pearce!).  He is a wonderful actor and physical Decroux trained performer.  Yesterday we went to his home for a "meeting" about the show. The meeting was mostly eating food he and his wife Olga (Growtowski trained performer) made for us, laughing at his stories of his army days in Siberia and hearing Igor play about 10 different instruments.  Privately, Russians are the most generous hosts I've ever encountered.  It was lovely and I look forward to working with him very much. The pressure of the festival grows as we look for instruments, lights, costumes etc and we are eager for our gang to get here, hopefully with all their luggage, computers, creativity and bodies in tact!



end of winter as Daniel plays
Ludmilla, intrepid administrator


 The bureaucracy has been startling as usual. Our new visas (they only last for three months...no good reason) had to be prepared and submitted THREE times by the administrator at the Academy, each time re-written in hand and signed by me.  One new policy about where to register was in existence for only one month...no way of knowing when these things happen unless you are unlucky enough to try to do business during that month! 
Sasha on tank with Russian flag

street dogs near our house
sasha thinking about war and peace
This post is too long and leaves out so much of course.  I'll leave you with photos of the pack of dogs who live on their own near our Metro stop, the Artillary museum of Weapons. 


And one video of sasha philosophizing on war and peace.


Russian word of the day:   мир. (Meer)  "Peace"

P.S. bonus photo of Peter Stein and Maria Klaus Bandauer (in wig) taking a bow at a (shhh, not very good) production during the European Theatre Prize Festival.  We saw three shows. Non very exciting...will see Uncle Vanya directed by Lev Dodin at the Maly Theatre in May which I am really looking forward to.







Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Mind the Gap

Mind the Gap. Sorry it's been so long....our internet went to "slooooowwwww" mode for several weeks. It took some leg work but Volodya fixed the problem so we're back.
To start off, I must document one sad bit of news. Volodya's father Sergei Rovinsky, died last week.  He was suffering from Parkinsons and the last few years had been very bad.  Volodya and his sister attended the funeral with Sergei's wife and family.  Volodya is fine and is glad his dad is now at peace.

lego birthday sign made by Sasha


blini eatin' at the BBQ party
On an oddly related note, we celebrated Volodya's birthday March 24 at his Mom's house then again two days later at our apartment with 6 of his friends.  It was fun to see everyone and especially cool to catch up with Anya who I worked together with on "The Meyerhold Project" when I was at Yale 1997-1999. She looks great and sends big love to anyone from the project I am in touch with (shout out to Yalies reading).


blini! how does she make them so THIN???

the "zakuska" for Volodya's birthday dinner 

See photo of the food at the Rovinsky home and Ludmilla's four grandchildren all together (Sonya, Ignat, Daniel and Sasha). For those who didn't know, Ignat has been recovering from surgery, chemo and radiation to treat brain cancer and is doing amazingly well! He is truly a miracle. I adore this kid (now 21!) who has decided to become a social worker. He's in college now, only one year behind where he would have been.  He's really good with the boys as he speaks English and is just such a gentle and patient young man.

all four of Ludmilla's grandchildren in one place
We hosted a BBQ dinner at Baba Luda's last weekend.  The BBQ (I made ribs after Volodya hunted high and low for BBQ sauce) was a huge hit.  We are so happy we have corrupted them to be partial to the cooking of the Southern U.S.  While the ribs slow cooked, the boys ate blini (of course) made by Baba Luda. Because Blini go with everything, even BBQ.  I know I mention blini a lot...I'll work on adopting other interests.

sleds
sledding at the "bar hill" at night
Sledding,  Russian style means finding dangerous, old strips of plastic someone threw out to slide down hills in the nearby park. Here they are sledding at what we call "bar hill" because the "hill" is basically the roof of a bar.  The thumping base beat makes for good back ground to sledding.  Luckily this snow is old news. The melt is on. Sun every day and the dirty snow fades to memory. Unfortunately Russians are not in the habit of keeping public places clean. The streets are full of trash. But today and yesterday, all the detritus that the receding snow revealed was being cleaned by many many sanitation workers. So, I look forward to full on spring!

our neighborhood blini stand. "Teremok"

Iguan dance will be in festival too
We have artistic news.  We (Theatre Novi Most) will be performing our show M2:Mayakovsky and Marinetti at the Bodyword Festival here in May.   Three of the TNM gang, Dan Dukich, Julianna Drajko and David Steinman will join us from Minneapolis! We are so grateful to various last minute funding helpers for making their trips possible.  The festival is a "celebration of unusual forms of dance in connection with art and literature". As M2 is about Mayakovsky's writing and is certainly "unusual dance", it seems a perfect fit.  We'll be conducting workshops in physical improvisation for this international festival too.  The website is down right now but it's beautiful and can be found at www.bodyword.spb.ru
I think we perform May 19th, so tell all your Petersburg friends.

The State Theatre Academy, Makovaya St.
In teaching/academy news, we have begun the course with the teachers.  Academy web site  http://www.tart.spb.ru/).  They are a really dynamic group and eager for the exchange.  It's interesting to talk with them about teaching young actors and directors here. The challenges are so similar! Igor is a pantomime teacher (Decroux trained) and we spoke about the kids being "plugged in to computers and smart phones so much that they forget what real life and human contact feels like" and Acting teacher Lena talked to me about wanting kids to get out of their heads but finding they don't trust their bodies at first....sound familiar?  One difference:  I often ask "how did that exercise feel to you and what did you notice?" and then there is a pause during which I wait for a response. With both the teachers and the student group, people take a while to answer me at first, as if they are not sure I mean it-- is it rhetorical?  One teacher said "that's the first time a teacher actually asked me that and expected me to answer!" She was half joking but I think there is some truth in this.  The teacher as "Master" is a pervasive icon here.  The American notion of "everyone's opinion is valid" and "we are all artists!" is somewhat suspect. In part for good reason....quality is valued here and quality is elitist.  I am elitist in some ways so I get it. The student group is so wonderful! I will post photos of these talented, young, energetic, positive, hard working students soon. As our time together is only one day a week I am focusing only on improvisation. I'm not trying to build a performance so as not to take any time away from the training.  They are growing so quickly it is dazzling.
Maxim Gorky -- our Metro stop is "Gorkovskaya"
I've been thinking about the meaning of art.  A Russian dramaturg once said to me that she thinks democracy and freedom kill art because in a free society art is not needed in the same way.  It is not as urgent. It is no longer where one goes to see and hear the truth, even in metaphor (especially in metaphor!). I'm not sure I agree completely, but there is something to this.  I ponder.  Life is harder here, there is just no two ways about it.  But it's not like it was in Soviet days for sure. Not even like it was ten years ago even with the moves toward nationalism.  One friend, speaking of Russia now, said "yes, we have more malls but less freedom". So, is the art "urgent" now?  I don't know yet.  We are seeing a bunch of theatre next week when the European Prize Festival is in town. Peter Stein's piece is one I'm quite excited to see. We saw DEREVO a few weeks ago.  Artistically stunning, with some beautiful movement. It didn't add up to a satisfying whole for us but we loved the audience! They meet the actors so bravely here.  Acting is considered such a noble way to live and the audience seems to want to shower them with love and support. It's quite moving. Bows go on forever.....

We have been in planning stages for the upcoming season of work in Minneapolis (exciting plans for shows at the Southern, Playwrights Center and Children's Theatre) so my mind has been in two places....we have been here about 1/3 of our time already and there are days of being home sick.  We miss you all!
Please write us and keep us in your thoughts.

Bonus: Russian word of the day -- кухня (Kuknia) KITCHEN

on the couch/dinner chairs in Baba Luda's house