Odin Teatret
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Odin Teatret was founded in Oslo in 1964 by director Eugenio Barba, who had been a pupil of Jerzy Grotowski. Since 1966, the company has been based in Holstebro, Denmark. The Odin is also the base for ISTA, the International School of Theatre Anthropology, founded by Barba in 1979, and the Centre for Theatre Laboratory Studies (CTLS), founded in 2002.
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[edit] Background and History
In 1961, Italian theatre student Eugenio Barba left his studies at the Polish State Theatre School to join Jerzy Grotowski at Teatr 13 Rzedow in Opole. After three years with Grotowski, Barba travelled to India where he learned Kathakali, then returned to Oslo with the intention of becoming a theatre director. As a foreigner in Norway he found this was not easy, so he formed his own company, Odin Teatret, in October 1964. The company members were young peolpe who had failed to gain admission to the Oslo State Theatre School and they rehearsed their first production in an air raid shelter.
In 1966, the Danish municipality of Holstebro invited Odin Teatret to create a theatre laboratory there, offering an old farm and a small sum of money. Nordisk Teaterlaboratorium was established as the umbrella organisation for Odin Teatret and all its activities. Since 1984, Odin Teatret has been a self-governing institution and today it has a permanent salaried staff of 18 people (including actors, technicians and administrative staff).
In 1979, Barba founded ISTA, the International School of Theatre Anthropology as an itinerant university and multicultural network of performers and scholars whose common field of study is theatre anthropology. Since 1990, ISTA in collaboration with the University of Bologna has organised the University of Eurasian Theatre, holding conferences and encounters of a theoretical-practical character. Another of the ISTA activities is Theatrum Mundi, a performance montage of scenes drawn from the repertoire of the physical scores of the Asian and Odin actors.
In 2002, the Centre for Theatre Laboratory Studies (CTLS) was established at Odin Teatret in collaboration with Aarhus University. As well as documenting and archiving all of Odin Teatret's activities, CTLS is researching the contribution of contemporary and historic theatre laboratories, promoting exchange between national and international theatre networks, and initiating seminars and conferences on theatre laboratories as a creative professional and theoretical environment.
[edit] Company
Founding Director Eugenio Barba continues to lead the company, and some of the original actors are still with the company. The current company of actors is Kai Bredholt, Roberta Carreri, Jan Ferslev, Donald Kitt, Tage Larsen, Else Marie Laukvik (founding member), Augusto Omolú, Iben Nagel Rasmussen, Julia Varley, Torgeir Wethal (founding member), Frans Winther.
[edit] Performances
In just over 40 years, Odin Teatret has created thirty performances, many of which are still in its current repertoire. A full list of performances can be found on the company's web site. The most recent performance is Andersen's Dream, which premiered in 2005 for the centenary of the birth of the writer Hans Christian Andersen and is now touring widely.
[edit] Publications
Odin Teatret's publishing activities began in the 1960s with the publication of the magazine T.T.T. (Teatrets Teori og Teknikk) and Jerzy Grotowski’s book Towards a Poor Theatre, which was translated into more than fifteen languages. Today it publishes books about Odin Teatret and ISTA; videos of Odin Teatret's performances, pedagogy and training; videos of other practitioners' productions and pedagogy; music; posters; and the journal The Open Page (in association with the Magdalena Project).