Homework / Joanna Górska, Jerzy Skakun
Ali: Fear Eats the Soul
a play based on Rainer Werner Fassbinder’s film
director
Agnieszka Jakimiak
premiere
19 December 2017
running time
85 min (bez przerwy)
stage
scena mała
UPCOMING SHOWS
Fri 19 April
hour 19.30
Sat 20 April
hour 19.30
Sun 21 April
hour 19.00

PHOTO GALLERY

VIDEO

  • photo: Magda Hueckel photo: Magda Hueckel photo: Magda Hueckel photo: Magda Hueckel photo: Magda Hueckel photo: Magda Hueckel photo: Magda Hueckel photo: Magda Hueckel photo: Magda Hueckel photo: Magda Hueckel
CAST
KAROLINA ADAMCZYK
KAROLINA ADAMCZYK
GRZEGORZ ARTMAN
GRZEGORZ ARTMAN
KLARA BIELAWKA
KLARA BIELAWKA
ŁUKASZ JĘDRZEJCZAK
ŁUKASZ JĘDRZEJCZAK
guest
JULIAN ŚWIEŻEWSKI
JULIAN ŚWIEŻEWSKI

CREATIVES

director - Agnieszka Jakimiak

dramaturg, stage designer, lighting director, video - Mateusz Atman

translator - Iwona Nowacka

choreographer - Agata Maszkiewicz

music - Łukasz Jędrzejczak
director's and set designer's assistant - Emilia Korsak
curator - Marta Keil

producer - Kuba Olszak

stage manager - Barbara Sadowska

 

cast – Karolina Adamczyk, Grzegorz Artman, Klara Bielawka, Łukasz Jędrzejczak, Oskar Stoczyński (replacement for G. Artman: 11, 12.02.2023) Julian Świeżewski

 

 

SYNOPSIS

Rainer Werner Fassbinder made a film about an elderly German cleaner who falls in love with a thirty-years-younger Moroccan, and the feeling is mutual. The protagonists refer to each other as ‘old woman’ and ‘Arabian dog’. Their relationship doesn’t seem to sit well with anyone, but many benefit from it. Ali: Fear Eats the Soul (1974) is a story about a society that fears anything seen as different, but its economic will to survive causes it to appropriate all things foreign and adapt them to fit its narratives.

 

Some stories are harder to tell than others, particularly in today’s Poland. There are stories we cannot imagine or understand, especially if set in an ethnically and religiously homogeneous country. We don’t tell the love story of Emmi and Ali, because a story about a relationship stronger than social terror is not our story. In the 1970s, Fassbinder’s film made it possible to understand Germany’s economic, social and economic reality. Now, in the 21st century, in Poland, Fear Eats the Soul demonstrates why we cannot and do not want to grasp our current reality.

 

Our story is about a society terrified to see in their midst people who don’t conform to the same laws and rules. Our story is about rumours, slander, hasty accusations and false communities; about phantasms and notions that have a social reality where, true to the motto of Fassbinder’s film, ‘Happiness is not always fun’.

 

 

The play is produced as part of The Fourth Generation, a project curated by Agnieszka Jakimiak, Marta Keil and Iwona Nowacka and supported by the Foundation for Polish-German Cooperation and Warsaw’s Goethe Institute.

 

partners: Schauspielhaus Bochum; Ringlokschuppen Ruhr, Mülheim

project coordinator: Jakub Olszak

 

As part of the project, on Sunday 10 December, an open discussion was held, hosted by Marta Keil, with actress and activist Alina Czyżewska; Matthias Frense, director of the Ringlokschuppen Ruhr, Müllheim; Sasha Kölzow, a dramaturg at the Schauspielhaus Bochum; and writer and translator Katarzyna Tubylewicz, author of the book Moraliści. Jak Szwedzi uczą się na błędach i inne historie (The Moralists: How the Swedes Learn from Their Mistakes and Other Stories).


 

 

Teatr Powszechny
im. Zygmunta Hübnera
ul. Jana Zamoyskiego 20
03-801 Warszawa
tickets 22 818 25 16
22 818 48 19