Print Page
General Inspector at Dickinson
On the evening of December 10, 2010, Russian students at
Dickinson performed their adaptation of Nikolai Gogol’s satirical play The
Inspector General to a full house of students, professors, and Carlisle
residents. The performance, held at the Cubiculo on High Street, was entirely
in Russian, with English subtitles projected alongside the stage. This
particular adaptation was student-run, directed, designed, and acted, with the
Fourth-Year Russian class (RUSS 360) working on the staging of the play over the
course of the fall 2010 semester. Several students in Intermediate Russian
(RUSS 116) also assisted by performing minor roles.
"We spent countless hours working on this play
and I had many a sleepless night thinking about scenes and different ideas we
could work with and to what extent we wanted to negotiate with Gogol, where we
wanted to use Meyerhold, etc. There were ten thousand decisions that went
into the production - lighting, sounds, acting, dancing, organization of bodies
on stage, the body as a prop, crowd movement, interplay between the audience
and the actors, silent scenes, trying to bring about the duality of heart-felt
laughter and absurdity partnered with a sad and deep emptiness. There
were so many obstacles we had to overcome. We all really poured
everything we had into it and I am extremely proud." Pat Kearns
'11
"Having never acted in a production before, to
me, being able to participate on stage in Revisor was an exciting challenge. I
learned a great deal about theater, teamwork, and the creative process while
working on the play. Most importantly, I found the process invaluable to my
Russian language skills, as I was determined to speak each line accurately and
with the right inflection, as well as my knowledge of a play and characters
that are still essential to Russian culture today." Kim
Ferington '11
"I definitely felt challenged, but engaging in
the acting process with the help of my fellow peers and Professor Duzs made the
entire experience remarkable because I learned that there is no such thing as
the IMPOSSIBLE." Nina Ioannidou '11
see the video
Click thumbnail below to view image
«
previous | next »