Spregelburd’s Stubbornness

In recent years I have almost religiously gone to see something by or featuring Rafael Spregelburd whenever I visit Argentina, on stage or screen. On my last trip, this March, alongside two films(Florencia Percia’s debut Cetáceos and Lucrecia Martel’s historical drama Zama) and a talk, in conversati...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Benjamin Bollig
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Edinburgh 2018-06-01
Series:Forum
Online Access:http://www.forumjournal.org/article/view/2772
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spelling doaj-29eab244667b4be382ea6ffed28b6e082020-11-25T03:47:07ZengUniversity of EdinburghForum1749-97712018-06-01262772Spregelburd’s StubbornnessBenjamin BolligIn recent years I have almost religiously gone to see something by or featuring Rafael Spregelburd whenever I visit Argentina, on stage or screen. On my last trip, this March, alongside two films(Florencia Percia’s debut Cetáceos and Lucrecia Martel’s historical drama Zama) and a talk, in conversation with the academic Gabriel Guz, it was his ambitious play La terquedad (Stubbornness). Spregelburd is widely acknowledged as one of Argentina’s most significant contemporary dramatists. His work appears regularly on European festival stages, and has won prizes worldwide. He has translated Harold Pinter, Sarah Kane, and other British playwrights for performance in Spanish. Yet it is a number of years now since The Argentine Moment appeared at London’s Royal Court, and his namewill hardly be familiar to British readers. Some may recognise him as a screen actor, playing the proverbially tortured political artist, gruff husband to the eponymous heroine, and love rival to SamHuntington’s lead in Nico Casavecchia’s Finding Sofia (2016).http://www.forumjournal.org/article/view/2772
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Benjamin Bollig
spellingShingle Benjamin Bollig
Spregelburd’s Stubbornness
Forum
author_facet Benjamin Bollig
author_sort Benjamin Bollig
title Spregelburd’s Stubbornness
title_short Spregelburd’s Stubbornness
title_full Spregelburd’s Stubbornness
title_fullStr Spregelburd’s Stubbornness
title_full_unstemmed Spregelburd’s Stubbornness
title_sort spregelburd’s stubbornness
publisher University of Edinburgh
series Forum
issn 1749-9771
publishDate 2018-06-01
description In recent years I have almost religiously gone to see something by or featuring Rafael Spregelburd whenever I visit Argentina, on stage or screen. On my last trip, this March, alongside two films(Florencia Percia’s debut Cetáceos and Lucrecia Martel’s historical drama Zama) and a talk, in conversation with the academic Gabriel Guz, it was his ambitious play La terquedad (Stubbornness). Spregelburd is widely acknowledged as one of Argentina’s most significant contemporary dramatists. His work appears regularly on European festival stages, and has won prizes worldwide. He has translated Harold Pinter, Sarah Kane, and other British playwrights for performance in Spanish. Yet it is a number of years now since The Argentine Moment appeared at London’s Royal Court, and his namewill hardly be familiar to British readers. Some may recognise him as a screen actor, playing the proverbially tortured political artist, gruff husband to the eponymous heroine, and love rival to SamHuntington’s lead in Nico Casavecchia’s Finding Sofia (2016).
url http://www.forumjournal.org/article/view/2772
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