Monday, June 29, 2009

"famous" people you've never heard of

The past few days have been filled with theatre!  Lectures, meetings with "famous" masters of the theatre, and shows.  


Can you guess which one is Tadasi Sukuki?  I bet you can...  His lecture was particularly fun... fun as in it took forever!  
I'll explain.  On Suzuki's right is his Japanese interpreter who spoke Japanese and Polish.  On Suzuki's left is the Japanese to Polish interpreter, and on that man's left is the Polish to English interpreter.  The lecture, an hour.  The actual amount said, probably about a page.  I still enjoyed his lecture, though, because of the necessitated straightforward approach of the topic. 




Richard Schechner.  He decided in the middle of his lecture to sit indian style.  He was an interesting man, very Western in his manner and approach to the lecture. 




A performance piece done in the mall after hours by the escalator. 
It was in Spanish or Portuguese, so I didn't understand some of the story, but still very interesting to watch. 




An avant garde piece done in a parking garage by a troupe from California.  The piece was called The Internationalists, the troupe Poor Dog Theatre.




The man on the far right is Ludwik Flaszen, a director, literary critic and confidant of Grotowski.  A very animated man who thinks a lot of himself... we left his lecture early. 




The talented and charming man in the orange shirt is none other than Peter Brook.  He was my favorite speaker thus far, and not just because he speaks English.


More sights from around the city...


Transition by Jerzy Kalina.  Commonly called The Anonymous Pedestrians.  These statues commemorate those who disappeared on December 13, 1981 with the introduction of Martial Law.



This reminded me of Austin. :)



A popular billboard seen around the city and a salute to wiener dogs everywhere.



A table at the Empik Cafe.  I <3>


View of Wroclaw from the bridge over the river.



More Wroclaw




A building near the park




There's definitely a gnome at the top of this picture... and don't worry, the gnome post is still coming. ;)

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Auschwitz

Yesterday was illuminating and difficult at the same time, all around.  I decided that I was going to go to Auschwitz in Krakow, which I thought would be an easy journey.  It proved to be anything but.  

I left my hostel at 7:00 for the train station.  I've been having serious problems navigating things in the city because of the way the streets are laid out and my natural ability to get lost on one street is really astounding.  (They're thinking of studying me.)  So, I get lost on the way to the train station and I'm at a newspaper stand asking the man if he speaks English and if he knows where the train station is when a woman behind me pipes in and says in perfect mid-western English, "Yes, he does.  He knows where the train station is too."  I turn around and this little woman is smiling at me and tells me that she's going just past the train station and she'll take me there.  Sure enough, she's from Colorado, but has been living in Poland for the last twenty years teaching English.  She not only took me to the train station, but gave me her phone number in case I need anything while I'm staying here.  :) 

Then there was the train station battle.  (believe me each leg of this trip is epic, so be prepared.)  None of the train station ticket sellers speak English so it takes me a while but I find the "Billet" window and find the right line and get a woman to sell me a ticket.  I then somewhat decipher the thing with the help of another old Polish bookseller and find the right train.  Now, here comes one of the worst parts of the day.  I'm sitting in the train car and there's an old couple across from me, a middle age couple on the far side of me an old man on one side of me and a smelly man on the other side of me.  (Europeans and their body odors...)  The "konductor" comes in and asks for tickets.  I pull mine out and he starts saying something to me in Polish and I obviously have no idea...  I look around in confusion, but no one else in the car speaks English.  Finally, the little grandma across from me pulls out her ID to show me to get mine and I comprehend that I have a student ticket and he wants to see my ID.  I pull my SU ID out and then he starts shaking his head and saying "problema".  I knew this wasn't good.  He continued to say things to me in Polish and I'm shaking my head cause I've got no idea what his "problema" is and then he starts yelling. 

Now, the thing I've noticed about most Europeans, and the Polish in particular, if you encounter a stranger they almost always treat you very formally, a cultural difference from Americans who I notice to be more warm and open in their encounters with strangers.  But, once you break past this initial barrier of contact with the Polish, they're ready to do your bidding and by God I thought this little Polish grandmother was going to rip the konductor a new one.  She was sputtering in Polish so fast I can't imagine those being real words and then the whole car got into it with the konductor!  Everyone had been completely silent up to this point, but I knew they were talking about me because they kept pointing to me and then getting angry at the konductor.  It was kind of wonderful except that I was crying.  There's nothing like people screaming at you and around you in a language you can't decipher to freak you out.  Eventually, the konductor got a young guy from the next car who spoke a little English who told me that the ticket I have is a student ticket, but its only for Polish students.  I had to buy a new full price ticket on the train and get refunded for the other one at the next stop.  (luckily one of the women in the car was also kind enough to walk with me to the ticket window and explain the situation in her fluent Polish so that I actually did get my money back.)  

Right before my stop, a young woman my age, who spoke English fairly well, got into the car.  I found out that she's going to school in Poland for acting and actually knew about the Grotowski festival and its events and will be attending some next week.  She asked for my email so she can send me some info about other things happening around Wroclaw.  (Also, I finally learned how to say Wroclaw correctly.  Its pronounced Vrocswah.)  

So, after the five hour train ride, its about 2:30.  The bus station is adjacent to the train station, so I get a ticket to Oswiecim where Auschwitz is.  The little tiny bus that was going there, however, was full so I had to stand in the aisle for about half of the 75 minute trip.  Windy roads and a fast driver.  Not a good combination.  There were stops along the way though, so eventually I got a seat.  A good thing, too, because I was about to be sick. 


Eventually, around 4:15, I arrive.  The entrance to the museum is set a 15 minute walk back from the bus stop.  And it really wasn't what I was expecting.  In my mind I'd always imagined the gate of Auschwitz to be this huge ominous thing and the buildings inside to be dwarfed by its size.  In fact its quite the opposite.  The gate seems little, almost insignificant, but the barracks and even the trees are massive and dwarfing. Yesterday was cold and rainy so the streets in the camp were muddy and I was freezing the entire time.   I can only imagine what the place would have been like under a layer of snow.  Because I arrived so late, there weren't any guided tours, but I bought a little guide book and there are signs everywhere describing events in English, German and Polish.  

As you walk into the camp, the barracks are each set up to be different museums.  The first one or two have a lot of historical documents and prove the atrocities of the camp.  Others have the infamous rooms of shoes, hair, glasses, suitcases and other personal affects of the prisoners that were found at the time of the camp's liberation.  The last barracks are set up more like art museums with artistic displays and monuments commemorating the events.  I found these to be particularly moving and interesting.  

Most of the information I received at the camp were things that I already knew.  I have a particular interest in the Holocaust and have taken several classes that focus on the Jewish question and Germany leading up to WWII, so I've done a good deal of study.  I didn't visit Auschwitz-Birkenau because of the time constraints, but also because I'm not sure I could have handled much more even after the three hours I was there.  It wasn't the displays inside the barracks or the information offered, there's only so much connection you can feel to things that are so obviously on display for you, but it was the atmosphere.  Cold and rainy even in June, the place was almost deserted by the time I left which gave me the eeriest feeling. I was glad to leave, but glad that I was able to visit and see the place that holds so much history.  

The trip back was easier for me, but of course just as long.  I sat in a car full of 20 something guys on the way back, all of which were Polish backpackers.  Interesting conversations, when they decided to speak in English of course.  I finally got back to my hostel at 3:00 am.  It was a long, long day, but for my curiosity it was worth it.  


The view close to the front of the gate.  The building on the left is used as the main part of the museum now. 




A stain glass of camp prisoners.




A room with pictures of French prisoners.



The display of shoes that literally took up half the second floor of the barrack.  




The barrack devoted to those of French nationality was my favorite.  The hallways had only small night lights close to your feet and projected on the walls were shadows of children, prisoners, workers, husbands and wives, and the small lights at your feet projected your shadow with theirs.  When I walked into the first room, I actually thought there was another person in the room with me and it really freaked me out.  I really felt as though the people who were in the camp were around me, but at the same time seeing my own shadow intermix with theirs made me feel as if I were one of them.  This part of the museum really added a level of humanity and attention to the fact that those affected were individuals, not just a number.  

Sunday, June 21, 2009

wroclove


The front side of the museum on the square. 



Local Catholic church.  When the city was systematically destroyed by the Germans during WWII, the churches were the only buildings that were consistently left untouched.  Across the city they are some of the oldest and most beautiful buildings. 



Another part of the square.



View from my hostel window



They have camels in Wroclaw, too.  In the zoo... 




Some creatures I saw at the zoo that I thought were really cute and snuggly.  As soon as I learn to read Polish I'll let you know more about them.



A cottage (storage) at the zoo.  I'm pretty sure this is where I imagined being as a child when I pretended I was Snow White. 




Part of the local flower market.  Beautiful flowers full of bees.


 
Poster for the play Cleansed.  It was everything I expected and more... 



View from a park in town.


Some of the displays around town for the Grotowski festival. 



An evil demon creature on the outside of a bank.  It scared me so I took its picture. :)



Museum on the square.



The view from another park close to my hostel. 








Coming soon: the gnome series...

Thursday, June 18, 2009

no UR-Hamlet!

I just figured out how to get my laptop to charge in my room and I am unequivocally happy. :) 






So, let's talk for a moment about what time the sun rises here.   4:00 am.   How do I know this you might ask?  (For we all know that Molly is not an early riser)  I know this because for some unGodly reason every morning I've been waking up at this time, only to see the sunrise.  I'm not sure what it is that's waking me up, but its 11:00 am now and I've been up since 4:00.  Not helping me adapt to a normal schedule here... 

But I have discovered something in this early rising: Wroclaw should rightfully be called the city that never sleeps.  Everything in the market square closes at midnight or if its a pub much later.  I got done with the play I saw last night around 10:30 and since its a Wednesday night I figured my options might be limited in what I could find... I was so wrong!  Walking back nearly everything was open... People were out having fun and drinking and when I woke up this morning at 4, they were still out!  I could see people just leaving some of the nearby clubs from my window.  I'm not oblivious to partying, but I thought on a Wednesday night people might be done before four... 

As for the show last night, I had a ticket to see Eugenio Barba's UR-Hamlet.   I left my hostel about an hour before the show because google maps told me that it was 20 minutes walking distance or a 5 minute drive.  I was going to grab dinner and depending on time, take a cab or walk.  Well, unfortunately for my stomach I discovered that H&M is 20 yards from my hostel.  (I bought a purse to carry my stuff in because I was at the time just walking around with my wallet :)  So, I didn't eat and ran out of time, so I go to find a cab, (here you pick up cabs at special points kind of like a bus stop) and I walk up to one of the drivers and show him the address of the theatre and ask him if he speaks English (kind of) and if he can take me there (he laughs).  Apparently the place I want to go is 300 kilometers away.... he told me to take a train.  
I am a this point rather confused.  So, I walk further down the line of cabs and find another driver and ask if he speaks English (better than the first).  He looks at the address and confirms what the other man said.  So, I walk back up the street and find this annoying boy who kept trying to give me flyers for a pizza place.  He's younger so I assume (in Poland thus far in my experience its a safe assumption to assume if a person looks to be under thirty or works in a fast food establishment or anyplace dealing with tourism or travel they probably speak enough English to communicate) that he can probably give some guidance.  This time I pull out my ticket to the play and show him the ticket.  He nods and begins to ask a friend.  The friend wasn't sure so he asks one of the cab drivers who tells him where to go.  The boy then tries to explain to me how to get there, but I ended up just showing another driver the ticket and having him drive me there so that I wouldn't be late.  I'm pretty sure he over charged me for the cab, but at this point I was relieved to find my destination was close and not 300 km away.   

So, I get to this building with a crowd outside and assume its the right place. (Don't worry, it is)  A young woman comes up to me and hands me a brochure and I said 'Thank you" and she takes it back and gives me one in English.  Thank goodness.   So, I'm scouting things out, standing around and who do I see...  lo and behold its Sergio (my Italian Theatre History Professor who I often imitate lovingly/mockingly in walk, accent and gesture)'s wife, Faith.  I can't quite explain to you how excited I felt.  I mean I wasn't lost or confused at this point and getting there wasn't the greatest of tasks, but seeing a familiar face was inexplicably exciting.  I ran up and gave her a hug; she was probably taken aback because I don't know her that well, but oh well.   As it turns out she and Sergio were there to see UR-Hamlet also, so I got to sit with them which was nice.  

But let me explain why we got to sit together.  As you might question, weren't there assigned seats at this festival as there are in most theaters?  

No.  There weren't because it was outside.  Yup.  Outside.  

I guess I should also explain that it was 45 degrees last night.  Imagine my unhappiness to find this out because I only wore a light cardigan.   Fortunately the show lasted only an hour and a half and my large purse I just purchased also served as a place to curl up under.  

I'd like to explain the show, but I'm not really sure that I can... but I'll try.

It started off with something most who've read Hamlet are familiar with.  The bit put on by the players for the Court.  So, this is done in the Balinese style with masks and signs and singing/chanting.  It was extremely funny and the signs were in English and the wedding march and other things sung were in Western humor.  Then the actual play Hamlet begins... or so I think?  I can't be too sure at the events that followed.  And I will preface this by saying that I am pretty familiar with Hamlet having studied it at several different points in my education:

At certain points in the play I questioned who Hamlet was. 

 Yeah.  It was confusing first because only chapters or titles to the events were said in English and the play was based off Vita Amlethi by Saxo Grammaticusa, something I've never read nor am I familiar with.  Also, because of the many different styles fused together I became confused about the significance of things.  There were the Balinese dancers, the main characters who seemed to be dressed in styles reminiscent of the Victorian era, and then the chorus who entered at the beginning dressed some in modern clothing, some in Victorian and then some who later changed into wigs and were dressed to resemble prostitutes.  Plus the woman who played Saxo Grammaticusa, a male, who had a bald cap on because she's supposed to resemble a monk, instead looked like a Conehead.  Can you understand why I was confused?  

It probably would have been easier if I wasn't expecting the basic story of Hamlet, which this wasn't and I might try to see it again to gain a better understanding of things.  There were several really striking moments, however, involving the chorus.  At one point after the "plague" has hit the kingdom they begin dying in mass quantities and a man driving a fork lift comes out of the entry way and begins piling the bodies up and taking them out.  The chorus really did a lot for this production to allow for the audience to have a way to better understand the action of the play and to connect to the events (which is of course the purpose of the chorus). 

Tonight I'm seeing Cleansed by Sarah Kane, one of the plays I've studied over the past year in classes. I'm a little nervous because the content of the play is extremely graphic and sexual so hopefully its not too much.  

more later! more pictures too.  (the ones at the top are the view out my hostel window at 4:00 this morning. :)


Tuesday, June 16, 2009

hostel sweet hostel

I made it. I can't even put excitement into that sentence with an exclamation mark because I'm so tired. Today was a bad travel day... I totally jinxed myself. Well, I take it back. There were a lot of bad elements that were resolved with the kindness of strangers/pity. I had a connecting flight to make this afternoon in Bulgaria that was less than an hour between the two. So I haul it off the plane after having slept for an hour or two for the first time since my nap outside in the park (I'm really groggy) and I'm checking my bag in and the not-so-nice Bulgarian flight attendant tells me that not only am I over the weight limit by three kilos (each extra kilo is 10 euros) I can also only have 1 carry on (I've been carrying a large bag and a backpack). So i had to sit in the middle of the airport pulling stuff out my backpack trying to make it fit and then having to make the decision about what to leave behind... it was awesome. So, I go back to the counter and talk to another woman. At this point I'm starting to feel hot and dizzy because I'm wearing a long sleeved t-shirt and jeans and its 95 in Bulgaria and in the airport and the woman weighs my back and this time I'm four kilos over but she can see me starting to sway from side to side and shaking so she didn't charge me. :)

I had a couple other smaller mishaps with the bus ride to the hostel, but nothing major. I will say this for the Polish-- the kindest of anyone I've met so far. I had three different guys help me carry my bag in and out of the bus and upstairs and talked to so many others who gave me directions despite only speaking the smallest bit of English. So, I am very grateful to finally be in Poland where I'll have a bed and a place to put my stuff and of course a shower.

I'm not sure how often I'll be able to update from this point; the wall adapter I brought doesn't fit my computer so my laptop is dead. I'm writing this from the community computer here which isn't too bad, but I have to stand here to use it.

Anyway, I'll update soon when I've slept and showered. Hopefully my posts will also become more coherent once I do that...

one last thought: my hostel is above a KFC and it smells like chicken.

Monday, June 15, 2009

the post London me

The day has gotten a whole lot longer… I am now no longer jet lagged, just completely tired.  I managed to get around pretty well today, though.  I took the underground to see Westminster Abbey and Big Ben.  Unfortunately, once I got there, I was so tired that I just lay in the grass in the park across the street.  Once in front of Parliament, when I felt I had gathered my strength, I walked the hundred yards to Westminster Abbey where I fell asleep in the grass on top of my backpack and dearly hugging my other bag.  It was perfect weather, clear skies with just enough sun to keep me warm.  I got dinner from a local grocery, but it started to rain and I had to take refuge inside the Victoria Palace theater where I saw Billy Elliott.  Overall I got around remarkably well and figured the Underground out fairly easily... 

Famous last words.    

Ironically I wrote too soon.  Right after began the entry I went to the wrong airport terminal on the underground.   As I’m finishing typing this I’m sitting in the airport again, waiting for the “left baggage” to open up so I can get my luggage to check.  I'm sitting with a completely lovely woman named Toyin who I met after I went to the wrong place. The underground had stopped running the service between terminals and she and I were the only two left in the station.  We walked together and made our way back to the terminal we were looking for.  She bought me Starbucks and we discussed the business she runs, Obama, traveling, etc.   We had good conversation and its nice to have the company. :)  My flight leaves for Sofia in a few hours and I know tomorrow will be as equally busy as the last two days have been.  I only hope that my good fortune in travel continues and that I’m able to get some rest tomorrow night at the hostel in Poland. (and shower)


Westminsterish. It looks weird because I was standing right underneath it...




me across from Parliament where I took my nap.  This was only moments after the Japanese tourists woke me up... I was not pleased. 

  Parliament. woot. 


Wanna go down like London?

I have arrived in London!  Yea!  The flight went well... cramped and long, but good.   When I was sitting in Houston waiting to board my flight to London, a girl came and sat next to me.  We got to talking and I found out she's my age and this was her first time to travel alone too.  She'd had a rough time so far;  she's a Mexican citizen and had been detained and missed her connecting flights.  She was added to my flight last minute.  After a bit of talking she asked where my seat was.  Sure enough, her seat was right next to mine!  It made the wait and the flight to London a little bit easier to have someone friendly to talk to and we were able to help each other out too. :) 

I'm just about to go buy my ticket to the underground and head into central London...  More later from my 23 hour layover in London!

Friday, June 12, 2009

Packing!

Packing would be a lot easier if I could predict the future.  I would know if it were going to rain in Poland,  I would know if the button on my black sweater is going to pop off therefore rendering it completely worthless to the rest of my trip and  I could see if bringing my hair dryer is useless because I'll decide only to shower at night every other day. 




But because I have not quite honed my third eye, I have instead decided to consult my magic eight ball and to pack for every situation.  This has created a pile of items to be packed in a very small suitcase. (Fortunately I have been collecting items for weeks and have put my love for The Container Store to good use. :) 

In case you're unfamiliar with where I'll be traveling over the next two months here's a rundown...

June 14-16    "in transit" to Poland
June 16-30  Wroclaw, Poland 
June 30-July 9  Prague, Czech Republic
                                 Bavaria, Germany
                            Zurich, Switzerland
                                 Milan, Italy 
July 9-August 11 Sofia, Bulgaria
August 11-12 "in transit" back to the US

My time spent in Poland will be primarily in Wroclaw.  2009 is the  "Grotowski Year" (in honor of Jerzy Grotowski, famous Polish theatre director and innovator) and the two weeks that I'll be in Wroclaw the city is playing host to some of the biggest names in theatre: Peter Brook, Krzysztof Warlikowski, Pina Bausch, and Eugenio Barba.  Each night there are shows across the city as well as some special workshops and film showings during the day.  

After Poland I'll be traveling in Eastern Europe trying to see some areas that are a little less frequented.  (This part of the trip is a little less structured so you'll hear more about it as it happens...) In Bulgaria I'll be taking classes at the Rhodopi International Theatre Laboratory. This company works in conjunction with the Fourth World Theatre Projects, of which one of my professors serves as the artistic director.  Here I'll be taking movement oriented classes and learning to "think outside the box".  

More to come as I attempt to fit all of my clothing in my tiny polka-dotted suitcase.  As we speak both Jessica and Justin are on top of it, literally, trying to zip it closed.  Who knew space saver bags aren't like Mary Poppins' bag...