Theatre

Gesine Danckwart

Und morgen steh ich auf.

May I ask you? May I not you, please please? Please, I, I make you, but I make you. May I not you a bit bit happy. But I make you happy. You. I saw this face, this white fear-face, which can’t be anything else. It’s dangerous. This little bit bit more risk I have to afford myself, and this when but the fall. I hold on, cling. I don’t want to slip, slip away. I have to be careful. Bone glass. Have to keep smooth by re-inventing myself. Constantly. Against an abyss. Stoop and stretch. Inside is a monster. From when is there this monster. Hold on, stick to the things. Where am I please. When.

“The characters, language and text machines, which are subject to the constant current of the motivational anglicisms as well as an atrophy of language, don’t exist within a closed plot and order. The deconstruction of a tangible order is impossible to reproduce in a dramatic plot. It is more a composition of characters, dislocation, platitudes, in between fragments of individual people with a story, their own emotions. The sudden change from the position of a producer to the position of a consumer, who is his own producer, the citizen’s duty to be his own sales market and aficionado of the structure exploiting him.
To whose rhythm am I working here? Tomorrow I get up. What.” (Gesine Danckwart)

2 F, 3 M

World Premiere: 06.03.2006 · Maxim Gorki Theater, Berlin · Directed by: Gesine Danckwart

Production history

All Premieres
06
März 2006
Gesine Danckwart

Und morgen steh ich auf.

Theatre

UA

Theatre Maxim Gorki Theater, Berlin

More plays

All plays

Theatre

Gesine Danckwart

Auto

You call your play “car” – in doing so, which meanings of cars are you interested in?
The meanings cars have are huge..., at least every seventh workplace depends on them, technological developments, hopefully progress, environmental questions, and finally our concept of mobility. The car as a means of transportation fundamentally dictates our life: where we live, how we work, how we spend our free time and thus, ultimately, our way of thinking… the car is the symbol of a modern society: individually mobile.
And, additionally, this technologically highly complex thing is a very emotional object. Nearly everyone associates intense experiences and memories with it. … along the car, you can tell stories upon stories. …

Theatre and cars, at first glance, belong to very different areas. How do you bring them together?
…you can see the theatre as a space of production, where something is produced, where machines, technicians and artists work on a common product which then must be sold. And we have discovered very theatrical moments looking at the car, at the process of selling and buying. … This becomes especially clear, … in the car worlds … there, they have staged brand temples, and the customer’s new car is presented on a turning stage, while his favourite music plays – and others watch. That’s theatre.
Just recently it has become apparent again, how much joys and sorrows of the Germans… depend on this product “car”.

Are you also interested in cars as symbols of wealth and prestige?
Cars are and always have been a status symbol. Dead certain. … The car is a social module, identities depend on the brands, I am what I drive – or not… (Berliner Zeitung)

Theatre

Gesine Danckwart

Goldveedelsaga

2 F, 4 M

Come with us with our propaganda meteor on a short long journey home: the theatrical-movielike performance on a completely unremarkable remarkable square in Cologne: Krefelderstraße, intersection Aquino- and Balthasarstraße. A square, looking as if it was built for being played on, but at the same time too irrelevant to have a name. A gap, emptiness, opening of the slightly boring house facades, only recognisable as a square at second glance. Corner houses from the fifties – backdrop buildings typical for Cologne. Two restaurants, one kebab shop “Balthasar”. A kiosk for everything you could need for short-term survival and the church St. Gertrud for more long-term plans. From above, look it up in Google Maps, the church looks like a flash. For this backdrop, a 3D-play is being developed. Discovering the world in daily details.
The audience walks over and through the square’s stories, the places of use, the church. Can you hear? In the behind overground? The overtone choir has been rehearsing here for half an eternity. We will play on this square. With actors. Residents. With them. Audience in motion. With our protagonists. Who lives here? How? Do you believe? If you had to leave on the next Mars expedition tomorrow, what would you take to space – and what would you leave behind?
The focus is the meteor. A theatre miracle machine. Propaganda robur and multiplex theatre in one. The research mobile and mirror cabinet we’re transmitting the square radio from. Craned up for the final showdown. (Schauspiel Köln)

Digitales Textbuch