Theatre

Caren Jeß

Kitsch

A woman arrives at an unknown place by the sea. She doesn't know yet that she is about to tell intimate stories about her life. But suddenly this strange creature appears, which knows exactly how to make the woman talk. The creature is called Morpho Peleides and is undergoing a metamorphosis, for the development of which it feasts on unpleasant things. Well-formulated narratives, beautiful images? No, give me your innermost!

Kitsch is an autofictional play that drills into its subject like a stomach probe. Eating disorder and gender identity, sexual trauma and life fatigue. All of this seems harsh and yet is so familiar to many. But what does it actually mean, is it helpful when we reveal our emotions, or are we catering to a voyeurism that is becoming increasingly desensitized to stark images and true events? Oh, and who is that droll boy who always shows up when you least expect him? Is he really there, or is he just a figment of the imagination, like perhaps everything else here in this strange place by the sea, originating where addiction originates: in the mind?

Caren Jeß has written yet another piece that stretches the boundaries of the imaginable to the unimaginable and at the same time makes so much understandable that could hardly be described otherwise.

3 Performers

More plays

All plays

Theatre

Caren Jeß

Ave Joost

1 F, 3 M

Three men shoot JUST FOR FUN in an old dairy ruin. With schnapps and a self-made shooting figure. Marcus is Bastl's father and likes to have everything under control. Even Bastl, because otherwise he makes the wrong decisions. And Joost, because he's a really messed-up existence on speed. So the shooting fits quite well. Because it needs clear rules. It's just a shame that Malin also likes to roam the ruins. She's about 14 and has a thing for lost places, which give her the weirdest ideas for fantasy stories. Joost is supposed to chase her away. In vain. Malin meets him completely fearlessly. And even more. With her exaggerated seriousness, she uncovers an unexpected gentleness in Joost. Caren Jeß allows a strange friendship to grow on the fertile ground of heated male conversations, a friendship that is as fragile as it is fleeting. When Markus and Bastl find out that Joost didn't chase Malin away, they become suspicious. It's hard to trust someone like Joost that his interest is purely platonic. It doesn't seem fair - for the moment - because the happiness of this bizarre encounter weaves itself into the undergrowth of unwashed hair like a ray of sunshine. Faith, love, hope. There are brief flashes of the kind of person Joost could have become if his life hadn't gone completely wrong. "The right, the left, the centre strand. Your hair in my hands. The right, the left, the centre strand. Faith, love, hope, these three, feel how they slide into each other, faith, love, hope, these three, where have they been for so long? Where have you been, what have you been doing all this time? Faith, love, hope, say, where have you been?"

Theatre

Caren Jeß

Die Walküren

4 F, 4 M, Walküren

Caren Erdmuth Jeß, named Young Playwright of the Year in 2020 by the magazine Theater heute, has written a new play for the drama section of Ausweitung des Ringgebiets. Jeß, who always works rhythmically and tonally with her vivid language, takes her starting point in Die Walküren from Wagner's constellations of characters and motifs, but exaggerates the material, driving it into the grotesque and shifting the focus to the female characters. She develops her play from the choral force, anger and longing of the Valkyries: she lets powerful songs ring out at dizzying heights, while below, the other characters, all following base motives, go about their ludicrous activities. These are the excesses of a world that seems far removed from our own, yet always bears an uncanny resemblance to it. Like Jeß herself, who (as her alter ego ‘Erdmuth’) directly confronts the megalomania of Wagner's world-building in some of the most exciting passages of the play – between text, discursive authorial commentary and informative chatty stage directions – the Valkyries are on a collision course with the ‘national poet’. In his very comical silk slipper, for example, they encounter ingenious self-marketing strategies and, as timeless “old hands”, counter the patriarchal claims of Wotan and Wagner. ‘We keep the runes in embers and strike and bend them so that you will not recognise your heritage,’ they threaten. In Jeß's version of the material, the ‘heritage’ is clearly recognisable. But so are the legitimate questions that need to be asked about it. (Announcement by the Staatstheater Braunschweig)

Digitales Textbuch