Theatre

Albert Ostermaier

Superspreader

Marcel is a consultant, a frequent flyer, a high performer. His numerous business trips have taken him around the world several times, from airport to airport, always on the go, an existence in a hurry, barely arrived and already on the road again. Until he suddenly finds himself stuck in quarantine in Wuhan. Because a virus is on its way, with similar efficiency as Marcel and just as transformable. Like in a fever dream Marcel jumps through time and space. Flashes of memories of a childhood full of humiliations alternate with descriptions of sinister places of exploitation of humans and animals. Slaughterhouses, exotic markets - everywhere the virus has been, Marcel has also been on his journey. Or is it an escape? Because who is Marcel, really? Is he Patient Zero, who travels as a superspreader on behalf of the virus somewhere between megalomania and greed, lust for revenge and endless forlornness? A dystopian optimizer on his apocalyptic ride across the global financial markets?
Albert Ostermaier lets his restless protagonist race through a brilliant text with an insane love of language. At the end of each sentence, a new thought ignites, one fantastic chain of associations infects the next: an intoxicating monologue full of highly infectious energy.

1 M

World Premiere: 10.3.2021 · Théâtre National du Luxembourg · Directed by: Rafael Sanchez

Translated into English

Critics

Süddeutsche Zeitung

„Jedes Wort kann hier das Sprungbrett für den nächsten Gedanken sein, es ist fast ein bisschen wie bei Elfriede Jelinek. Sprachbilder mutieren wie Viren und fügen sich zu einem manischen Assoziationsstrudel, ansteckungsgefährlich.“

Deutschlandfunk

„Mit der sprachlichen Genauigkeit des Lyrikers mäandert Albert Ostermaiers Monolog durch die apokalyptischen Abgründe unserer Gegenwart, die sich durch die Schlaglichter, die die gegenwärtige Pandemie wirft, auf eigentümliche Weise aufgrellen lassen.“

Süddeutsche Zeitung

„Jedes Wort kann hier das Sprungbrett für den nächsten Gedanken sein, es ist fast ein bisschen wie bei Elfriede Jelinek. Sprachbilder mutieren wie Viren und fügen sich zu einem manischen Assoziationsstrudel, ansteckungsgefährlich.“

Deutschlandfunk

„Mit der sprachlichen Genauigkeit des Lyrikers mäandert Albert Ostermaiers Monolog durch die apokalyptischen Abgründe unserer Gegenwart, die sich durch die Schlaglichter, die die gegenwärtige Pandemie wirft, auf eigentümliche Weise aufgrellen lassen.“

Production history

All Premieres
09
März 2021
Albert Ostermaier

Superspreader

Theatre

UA

Directed by Rafael Sanchez

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Theatre

Albert Ostermaier

Cut

1 F, 1 M

Willy Zielke is a young, aspiring director and pioneering photographer in the 1920s. After his first film "Stahltier - The Steel Animal", he is recruited and used by Leni Riefenstahl and the Nazi regime for their Olympic films. Riefenstahl makes his art her own. When he becomes too dangerous to her career, she has him locked away in a psychiatric ward, where he is diagnosed as schizophrenic and forcibly sterilized. Five years later, she takes him back from the asylum because she needs him for her film "Tiefland". Later she will testify not to have been involved in Zielke's incarceration, and even more: not to have known about the later murder of the people she took out of the camps as extras for her film.
Willy Zielke wants to cut Leni Riefenstahl out of himself. She is the woman who has consumed him, who has sucked him dry and made his art her own. In an exorcism ritual, he once again conjures up the images that show how Riefenstahl, together with Goebbels, forged her perfidious plan.
In the screening room at the Reich Propaganda Ministry, Leni Riefenstahl and Josef Goebbels watch "The Steel Animal," Zielke's dark, expressionist-avant-garde masterpiece that Goebbels actually banned. As the film plays, the real scene unfolds between the two, evil in close-up, a close look at the mechanisms of power.
In sometimes nightmarish sequences, Schnitt takes us from Goebbels' home theater to the film set and into the bloody operating room, making us witness Zielke's inner recapitulation of the cruel story surrounding the destruction of his body and his work.

Theatre

Albert Ostermaier

Zum Sisyphos. Ein Abendmahl

1 M

An empty public house: ‘The Everyman’. Heavy, dark wooden tables. Some tables have chairs on them, some don’t. In the middle of the pub, the publican is sitting alone at his regular table in his Sunday best. There's not a guest in sight, not a sound, only the publican is speaking. As if for his life. Swearing. About impudent guests. About impatient customers who can’t wait for a table and just sitting down without asking. The dumb ones that ask for lactose-free milk in their coffee but then gobble down an extra-large slice of cheese strudel. About the philistines, the freeloaders and the skinflints. He really doesn’t ask much of his guests. “Say hello, order, pay, say thank you and goodbye!” Instead of this he gets rude behaviour, impertinent special requests and stingy tips. And there’s barely a guest that still appreciates the great art of cookery on display at ‘The Everyman.’ They are indifferent to the love with which the calf’s brain is roasted and have no idea bout the sweetness that a Salzburger dumpling just has to have. A publican can do naught but despair, despair of the public house and of the world, of life and death.
“The pub is my world. Even if I’ve always said that the guests are the end of the world! So are we! Each one of us is the end of the world and chooses his publican and his pub.”
Albert Ostermaier’s publican has read Hofmannsthal and Handtke and berates his guests in the most beautiful tradition of Thomas Bernhard. An unfathomable monologue, furious and comic, straight out of the dark heart of the pub ‘The Everyman’.

Theatre

Albert Ostermaier

Gold. Der Film der Nibelungen

6 F, 10 M, Stat.

Spotlights cut through the night. They are filming in front of the illuminated Wormser Dom. The successful film producer Konstantin Trauer wants to fulfill his life dream and film the Nibelung story. Up unto this point, he has failed with his ambitious project, but now he wants to prove to everybody that he will make his mark in the history of film. What he kept secret from everyone is that there is not much time left: a deadly disease rages inside him, and his production company is nearing bankruptcy. This final night of filming is Trauer’s last chance. For the realization of his idea, he couldn’t have picked anyone better than the eccentric directing star Arsenij Kubik, who pushes all the limits of sanity.

The mood is explosive, everyone plots against everyone else, everyone has something to hide and something to lose. Love, revenge, violence, death and passion: The Nibelungenlied becomes the secret script of this night. Even reality does not stop the film team: refugees reach the city, the park, the stage. And the drama in front of the cathedral does not only escalate in the battle of the queens.

GOLD talks about making films and going out of control. It is narrated by a film team who loves and hates, tears and kisses, while everything is hopelessly driven on to an explosive finale. We see the absurd theater which is created during filming, and the wild interaction between theater and film, Nibelungen and Noir. It is a camera journey into the abysses of the soul and its fears, a relentless close-up shot of our society.

Theatre

Albert Ostermaier

Glut

4 F, 10 M, 1 Kind, Statisten

A train, in the middle of the Orient on its way through the desert to the Persian oil fields of the British. In a special wagon: the travelling circus 'Notung': artists, fire-eaters, singers, musicians, clairvoyants, heartbreakers, wrapped in caftans. They play the story of the Nibelungen and travel as its heroes, Siegfried, King Gunther, Hagen or Brünhild. A juggler troupe, one thinks at first, but hidden under suitcases full of costumes, the whole train is full of weapons and explosives. For these Nibelungen heroes are disguised German officers, agents in 1915, in the middle of the First World War. Under the leadership of Captain Klein they are charged with the task of blowing up British oil wells in Persia, inciting Persian tribes to revolt and weakening the Empire considerably. Klein's Nibelungen Circus must perform surrounded by enemies. If the cover falls, their lives fall too.

Glut is based on a historical event. The author skilfully weaves the tale of the Nibelungen with an almost unknown chapter of German history. The train journey is an Orient Express journey of the craziest kind: full of anarchy, wit, political intrigue and false bottoms. For just as Captain Klein and his false heroes travel through the Orient in a grotesque travesty on a secret mission with an open outcome, the real Nibelungen were on their way from Burgundy to the court of King Etzel, where in the Nibelungenlied not only the common table awaits them at the end, but also their downfall. (Announcement Nibelungenfestspiele)

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