Audience Participation in Contemporary Lithuanian Theatre: A Conflicted Adaptation of the Western Tradition

This article explores how audience participation practices were introduced into Lithuanian theatre in the last three decades (between the early ‘90s and the late 2010s) and how the audience participation methods of the 1960s Western theatre are/were being implemented into contemporary Lithuanian the...

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Main Author: Kalinauskas Justinas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2019-12-01
Series:Meno Istorija ir Kritika
Subjects:
art
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/mik-2019-0008
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spelling doaj-ec4f17bab0814a00bab2fb91bbdd5a5c2021-09-06T19:22:33ZengSciendoMeno Istorija ir Kritika1822-45472019-12-0115110311510.2478/mik-2019-0008mik-2019-0008Audience Participation in Contemporary Lithuanian Theatre: A Conflicted Adaptation of the Western TraditionKalinauskas Justinas0Vytautas Magnus University, Kaunas, LithuaniaThis article explores how audience participation practices were introduced into Lithuanian theatre in the last three decades (between the early ‘90s and the late 2010s) and how the audience participation methods of the 1960s Western theatre are/were being implemented into contemporary Lithuanian theatre projects. The key goal of this article is to examine the evolution of audience participation and collective theatre tradition in Lithuanian theatre by analysing the preconditions for participatory practices in the country’s theatre scene and defining the scope and contradictions of participation in the latest examples of contemporary Lithuanian theatre practices. These contradictions are also apparent in contemporary Western performative practices, which have already distanced themselves from the collective theatre movement of the ‘60s and the ‘70s and the political agenda of the performances of that time, selectively retaining only limited participatory aspects of the environmental theatre culture as a new form of entertainment. Similar limited levels of participation in Lithuanian theatre can be based on a different premise—that changes in spectators’ habitude cannot catch up with the newly (re)introduced theatrical ideas after the 1990s, and that theatre creators are still trying to cautiously synchronise conventional observation tactics and modern theatre hierarchies with the interactive ones, thus slowing down changes in staging and spectatorship strategies as well.https://doi.org/10.2478/mik-2019-0008arttheatrelithuanian theatreaudience participationcollective theatre
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kalinauskas Justinas
spellingShingle Kalinauskas Justinas
Audience Participation in Contemporary Lithuanian Theatre: A Conflicted Adaptation of the Western Tradition
Meno Istorija ir Kritika
art
theatre
lithuanian theatre
audience participation
collective theatre
author_facet Kalinauskas Justinas
author_sort Kalinauskas Justinas
title Audience Participation in Contemporary Lithuanian Theatre: A Conflicted Adaptation of the Western Tradition
title_short Audience Participation in Contemporary Lithuanian Theatre: A Conflicted Adaptation of the Western Tradition
title_full Audience Participation in Contemporary Lithuanian Theatre: A Conflicted Adaptation of the Western Tradition
title_fullStr Audience Participation in Contemporary Lithuanian Theatre: A Conflicted Adaptation of the Western Tradition
title_full_unstemmed Audience Participation in Contemporary Lithuanian Theatre: A Conflicted Adaptation of the Western Tradition
title_sort audience participation in contemporary lithuanian theatre: a conflicted adaptation of the western tradition
publisher Sciendo
series Meno Istorija ir Kritika
issn 1822-4547
publishDate 2019-12-01
description This article explores how audience participation practices were introduced into Lithuanian theatre in the last three decades (between the early ‘90s and the late 2010s) and how the audience participation methods of the 1960s Western theatre are/were being implemented into contemporary Lithuanian theatre projects. The key goal of this article is to examine the evolution of audience participation and collective theatre tradition in Lithuanian theatre by analysing the preconditions for participatory practices in the country’s theatre scene and defining the scope and contradictions of participation in the latest examples of contemporary Lithuanian theatre practices. These contradictions are also apparent in contemporary Western performative practices, which have already distanced themselves from the collective theatre movement of the ‘60s and the ‘70s and the political agenda of the performances of that time, selectively retaining only limited participatory aspects of the environmental theatre culture as a new form of entertainment. Similar limited levels of participation in Lithuanian theatre can be based on a different premise—that changes in spectators’ habitude cannot catch up with the newly (re)introduced theatrical ideas after the 1990s, and that theatre creators are still trying to cautiously synchronise conventional observation tactics and modern theatre hierarchies with the interactive ones, thus slowing down changes in staging and spectatorship strategies as well.
topic art
theatre
lithuanian theatre
audience participation
collective theatre
url https://doi.org/10.2478/mik-2019-0008
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