Art & Entertainment | Book Reviews | Education | Entertainment Video | Health | Lifestyle | Sport | Sport Video | Search

 


Wolf's Lair at Circa Two

ALMOST A BIRD THEATRE COLLECTIVE

Almost A Bird Theatre Collective (Antigone, Angels in America, A Streetcar Named Desire, Jeff Koons) presents Wolf’s Lair
Circa Two >>> Fri 27 Nov – Sat 12 Dec, Tue-Sat 7.30pm & Sun 4.30pm
Book @ Circa >>> 04 801 7992 / www.circa.co.nz, Adult $25/Concession $20

Devised and created by Chapman Tripp Award Winners Sophie Roberts and Willem Wassenaar. Performed by Sophie Roberts, directed by Willem Wassenaar.

“Beautifully performed ... A fascinating glimpse into an ordinary woman trapped in the very centre of the maelstrom of evil that was Nazi Germany.” (Dominion Post)
“Immaculate performance ... stunning directing” (Salient)
“Dynamic ... compelling. A consummate performance” (Theatreview)
"Beautiful, thought-provoking theatre ... Amazing ... Flawless" (Theatreview)
"Impressive" (NZ Herald) "Dazzling ... totally and brutally honest ... A taste of the true New Zealand talent lingering on everyone's lips" (Coup De Main.Com)

The acclaimed Almost A Bird Theatre Collective (Antigone, Angels in America, A Streetcar Named Desire, Jeff Koons) performs the return season of their celebrated devised work Wolf’s Lair at Circa Two in Wellington, Fri 27 Nov – Sat 12 Dec, Tue-Sat 7.30pm & Sun 4.30pm, (no show on Mon).

Wolf's Lair is a 45-minute fractured portrait and monologue, about the "unspectacular life" of a very ordinary woman who found herself in 1942 at the age of 22 working in Wolfsschanze (Wolf's Lair), Hitler's headquarters. Performed by Sophie Roberts, directed by Willem Wassenaar. Germany, 1942. Traudl Junge was a young woman with dreams of becoming a ballerina. Instead, at 22 years old she became Adolf Hitler's personal secretary. She served him for two and a half years, until the final days of World War II when Nazi Germany fell. Traudl Junge was one of the few survivors to emerge from the Berlin Bunker where Hitler and many members of his inner circle ended their own lives. For many years Traudl Junge claimed she had been blind to the genocidal activities being carried out around her, it was not until the late 1960s that she began to confront her past. Over the next 35 years that confrontation became an increasingly painful process; an exhausting attempt to understand herself and her motivations as a young woman. She died in February 2002, shortly after the publication of her memoir.

Wolf’s Lair is an examination of the ghosts of one woman's conscience; a woman who served a mass murderer and yet does not fit into the polarized territory of the hero's and the villains. This play, rather than re-enacting her autobiography, shines a light on the pain and confusion she suffered - not at the time of the Nazi genocide, but when as an adult she finally started questioning and accepting her role in what happened around her.

ENDS

 
 
 
 
 
Culture Headlines | Health Headlines | Education Headlines

 

Charity Travel: Three Kiwis Skateboard Through The Andes And Atacama Desert

Three young Kiwis have become the first people to ever skateboard through the driest desert in the world... More>>

"Mood Of The Nation": Nation Moody

Although 2011’s mood was above the historical average, it was substantially down on the preceding two years, and would have been down further if it were not for an improvement around the time of the Rugby World Cup. More>>

Werewolf: Nature’s Boy - On Terence Malik

It’s easy to think of Malick films coming in pairs. In the 1970s: Badlands and Days of Heaven. Before those, he grew up in Oklahoma and Texas as the eldest of three brothers, studied philosophy at Harvard and Oxford but quit before finishing his doctorate. Then he studied film-making and got Badlands out just before he was 30. More>>

Werewolf: Classics - Tom’s Midnight Garden (1958)

For anyone trying to write about it, Tom’s Midnight Garden poses a significant problem. The twist ending will be well known to anyone who has read the book, but first time readers would justifiably want to kill anyone who spoils the surprise, which provides one of the most satisfying and moving resolutions in children’s fiction. More>>

ALSO:

Get Your Programme Here: Wellington Fringe Festival Begins

"We’ve got three weeks celebrating weird and wonderful expressions of art – around 60 dance, music, comedy, visual arts and theatre performances in 30 sites around the city featuring hundreds of participants…" More>>

At The Weekend:

Best Prize Ever: All Blacks Score Big At Westpac Halberg Awards

Rugby was the big winner at the 2011 Westpac Halberg Awards, with the World Cup winning All Blacks scoring three of the major Award categories, before capping it off by claiming the supreme Halberg Award. More>>

ALSO:

Scoop Images: Wellington Sevens Costumes 2012 Part III - Even more Photos Of Sevens Costumes

Scoop is running low on ideas for seven-costume-related blurbs, but has to say that the undead have a high average awesomeness this year. More>>
Day Two 94 arrested during Sevens weekend, and 68 evicted from stadium ... oh and New Zealand won.

ALSO:

AIDS Foundation: New Study Shows 1 In 5 With HIV Don’t Know It

On the eve of the Get it On! Big Gay Out, a ground-breaking study has revealed that 1 in 5 gay and bisexual men with HIV in Auckland don’t know they have it. The study is the first time that a measure of undiagnosed HIV has been recorded in New Zealand. More>>

ALSO:

LATEST HEADLINES

 
 
 
Culture
Search Scoop  
 
 
powered by newsagent
NZ independent news