Igor Bauersima

Igor Bauersima, born in Prague in 1964, grew up in Switzerland where he worked as freelance architect, musician and film director since 1989. In 1994 he and three actors founded a theatre troupe which gained international recognition. In 1998 their play Forever Godard was awarded the price for the best off-theatre production of the year at the Impulse Festival in Germany. In 2000 Bauersima wrote Exil and left the troupe. In the same year he established himself as an internationally renowned author with his play Norway.today. In 2001 the play received the audience award at the Mülheim Festival of New Plays, Bauersima was voted Most Promising Author of the Year by Theater heute and received the Bern Book Price. In the years 2003 and 2004 he was the dramatist with the highest number of productions in the German-speaking theatre, his plays are translated into more than twenty languages and staged in more than 100 theatres worldwide. Bauersima has been commissioned to write plays for the Burgtheater in Vienna and the theatres in Düsseldorf, Zürich and Hamburg, amongst others. Frequently he collaborates with the author Réjane Desvignes, since 2006 increasingly for film projects. Bauersima lives in Zürich and Paris.

Igor Bauersima, born in Prague in 1964, grew up in Switzerland where he worked as freelance architect, musician and film director since 1989. In 1994 he and three actors founded a theatre troupe which gained international recognition. In 1998 their play Forever Godard was awarded the price for the best off-theatre production of the year at the Impulse Festival in Germany. In 2000 Bauersima wrote Exil and left the troupe. In the same year he established himself as an internationally renowned author with his play Norway.today. In 2001 the play received the audience award at the Mülheim Festival of New Plays, Bauersima was voted Most Promising Author of the Year by Theater heute and received the Bern Book Price. In the years 2003 and 2004 he was the dramatist with the highest number of productions in the German-speaking theatre, his plays are translated into more than twenty languages and staged in more than 100 theatres worldwide. Bauersima has been commissioned to write plays for the Burgtheater in Vienna and the theatres in Düsseldorf, Zürich and Hamburg, amongst others. Frequently he collaborates with the author Réjane Desvignes, since 2006 increasingly for film projects. Bauersima lives in Zürich and Paris.

Theatre

Igor Bauersima

Context

1 F, 2 M, Verwandlungsdek

Three old friends. Author Nils, PR professional Casper and award-winning journalist Olga. One summer night, these three masters of the word get into a fight. They were inseparable during their time at university. They had agreed in writing to meet again ten years later. Soon it becomes clear that each of them had their own interpretation of their mutual promises while signing. The three of them try to get out of the looming heart-to-heart. Nils’ emotional state quickly spreads to his friends. He makes the situation inescapable. The three of them get caught in a struggle on the highest rhetorical level. They are forced to face the truth, and none is who he believes himself to be. At dawn, the conflict takes a crucial turn…

“It’s possible to achieve moral legitimation on the back of oppressed people, to stuff yourself with some remains of film glamour and fat cash, using the propaganda methods of the old slaughterers, without being held responsible by a court. And it’s possible to canonise the laws of the market even for these cases. It’s possible for us to loudly clap after being cheated for a long evening. But it’s unlikely we will gulp down the lowest common hamburger for millennia to come. Maybe the motor of history is that we’ve been really left behind by someone. At the very beginning… we proclaim ideas, even though they are lies, or we claim that our ideas are only wrong if seen next to the misled world, or we simply whack something. Or we decide to rely on the world, which is of course a reasonable, but difficult position. Or we simply do another play.” (Igor Bauersima)

Theatre

Audio

Igor Bauersima, Réjane Desvignes

Tattoo

2 F, 3 M, Verwandlungsdek

“Fred and Lea, he a ... writer, she an actress, ... like each other so much that they bear the tight circumstances in their one-room-production-eat-in-kitchen-toilet… with composure and are incorruptible even for the most lucrative idiotic offers by the television industry. That is until the appearance of Tiger, Lea’s old friend, who has made a successful living as a hip artist on the west coast and is a true work of art himself: his body is completely covered in tattoos, the newest, close to his belly button, is still oozing. In her drunken joy at seeing him again, Lea gives her old love a fateful promise: if he should die… she will take care of the mummified body, tend to it and dust it. Soon after, Tiger dies during an art performance, the plasticised tattoo-corpse moves into the one-room-shack and puts the morally superior couple to a hard test…
A lot of theatres will have a go at Tattoo. Hopefully.” (Theater heute)

“Cash versus class. Market versus morals. The seeming versus the real. Video versus reality. Desvignes and Bauersima have written a loud satire about the art scene that, while piling on and being absolutely crazy, manages to compete as an alternative counterpoint with Yasmina Reza’s comedy ‘Art’.” (Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung)
Tattoo catches you off guard with its morbid wittiness, humour and irony. It’s an exciting, cheeky, refreshing play about the coolness of youthful non-commitments and commitments, as unrestrained and naïve as it is.” (Saarbrücker Zeitung)

Production history

Digitales Textbuch