Jouko Turkka

Jouko Veli Turkka (born April 17, 1942 in Pirkkala, Finland) is a Finnish theatrical director and controversialist.[1] He was assistant director of the Helsinki City Theatre from 1975 to 1982, and a professor at the Helsinki School of Drama from 1981 to 1988, being its rector from 1982 to 1985.[2] Turkka influenced a whole generation of Finnish actors,[3] and created a recognisable style of acting.

Technique

The method was to progressively search for a mental borderline state by psychic and physical exertion, and the result was frequently an acting performance characterised by actors shaking uncontrollably and spewing spit and snot and other bodily fluids around them. Some likened the method to brainwashing, or to those of religious cults.

In 1987 the government had cause to remove him from his post as rector of the Helsinki School of Drama, when a group of his students held a performance at a theater symposium held in the city of Oulu. The organizers had specifically requested that the group should present something "shocking" so that there would be a bit of fuel for late night discussions at the bar.[4] However the young students overshot expectations by staging a performance art piece in which they cut themselves to bleed, smeared each other with excrement, and crucified and whipped one of their number. The group, called "Jumalan Teatteri" (The Theatre Of God) in a direct reference to Antonin Artaud, also hurled excrement at the audience, resulting in well-publicised laundry bills and court cases for the recompense for same.

When the Finnish Minister of Culture appointed Maija-Liisa Marton to follow him as headmaster, the whole student body occupied and barricaded the school building with desks and chairs, refusing to "give it up".

Although he was renowned for his sadistic directorial style and numerous instances of reducing acting students or actors he was directing to tears and/or nervous breakdowns, few people doubt his genius.

Several actors have written books which describe their experiences with him, either as students or actors.

Literary works

Plays, directed by

Books about Jouko Turkka

External links

References

  1. Rubin, Don; Péter Nagy; Philippe Rouyer (1994). The World Encyclopedia of Contemporary Theatre: Europe. Taylor & Francis. p. 261. ISBN 978-0-415-05928-2.
  2. Schoolfield, George C. (1998). A history of Finland's literature. University of Nebraska Press. p. 267. ISBN 978-0-8032-4189-3.
  3. Western European stages (Center for Advanced Study in Theatre Arts, City University of New York) 14 (1): 45. Winter 2002. ISSN 1050-1991. Missing or empty |title= (help);
  4. Harakka, Timo (February 2009). "Paluu 1980-luvun Big Brother -taloon". Helsingin Sanomat.
  5. Lehtonen, Soila (Fall 1982). "Jouko Turkka's The Burglary". The Drama Review (MIT Press) 26 (2). ISSN 1054-2043.