| A MIDSUMMER NIGHTS
DREAM
Ulan Ude, Buryatia Russia 1995
Shakespeare's play with shamans,
Soviet Generals, and the gods of the Central Asian lakes and forest
Buryatia is a the Buddhist nation in Russian
Siberia. Sheep-herding nomads have lived there for centuries on
the shores of the vast Lake Baikal combining ancient Shamanism with
the Buddhism of the Dalai Lama.
Summer in Buryatia is short, four weeks only, when the woods erupt
with wildflowers. The Buryat production was staged with Siberian
motifs: shamans, forest lovers, the Swan Goddess as Titania, The
Grandfatherly God of Lake Baikal as Oberon. Hippolyta was an Eskimo,
Theseus a Soviet General who spoke in Russian.
The body of the text was in Buryat. "Pyramis and Thisbe"was
played in bad Russian, with rude Buryat asides.
The
Buryat language is melodic and sounds like running water. The play
was translated by an 80 year old blind poet who recited his Buyrat
verses standing up while his peppy 70 year old wife read a flowery
19th century Russian version out loud to him.
The Buryat composer, Vlad Pantaev, wrote a haunting score played
on traditional string instruments . It was his daughter Irina, the
Siberian super-model, who arranged for the production, hand-delivering
a proposal to the theater in Ulan Ude. They were already considering
a Midsummer and were pleased at the coincidence.
The photograph right Oberon (note fur and striped boxer shorts).
Photos below: Puck and a fairy, both shamans. Two fairies in the
woods. Hippolyta and Theseus.
The color photographs have sadly faded.
The production was unforgettable.


Midsummer Night's Dream is beautiful like the Siberian summer.
We understand in this way the fascination of Shakespeare: hot,
filled with humor,
the dynamic portrait of our life, seen with the eyes of an American
director.
Pravda Buryatia
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