Director, Playwright, Puppeteer and Stage Designer Evgeny Ibragimov: Creative Residency at Boston College

Monday, November 11, 2024 -聽Saturday, November 16, 2024 | Please Check the Schedule Section for the Times | Multiple Locations鈥 | Registration Link To Come

Workshop space is limited, please register by 5:00 PM on October 26.

We are pleased to announce a creative residency at Boston College with the award-winning Circassian-Russian director, playwright, puppeteer, and stage designer Evgeny Ibragimov, November 11-16, co-sponsored by the Department of Eastern, Slavic and German Studies and the Theatre Department, with funding from the ILA. Ibragimov鈥檚 productions have been recognized internationally for their innovative, immersive staging, in which puppets participate on par with live actors, objects and shadows. Originally from the Republic of Karachaevo-Cherkessia in Russia鈥檚 North Caucasus region, Ibragimov has been based in the Czech Republic since 2014 and is now unable to work in Russia due to his opposition to the Putin regime and Russia鈥檚 ongoing war against Ukraine.

Ibragimov, also known by the name Shaoukh Ibragim, is an ethnic Cherkes (Circassian/Adyge), one of the hundreds of indigenous non-Slavic minorities of the Russian Federation, and one of his other areas of expertise is traditional Circassian puppetry, an art form associated with the dzheguako 鈥 Circassian master of ceremonies, storyteller, bard, folk satirist, magician, and soothsayer. On Friday, Nov. 15th, Ibragimov will present his Circassian puppet play, 鈥淎n Old Tale: The Legend of Happiness,鈥 based on folkloric sources, in which he recreates the atmosphere of the traditional Circassian dzhegu, or carnival. The puppets Ibragimov will be using in the performance are based on traditional Circassian puppets preserved in the Museum of Anthropology and Ethnology in St. Petersburg.

During his residency at Boston College, Ibragimov will also conduct a four-day workshop, 鈥淎nimating the Inanimate鈥 (Nov. 11-14, 5-8PM) for students of performing arts and others with an interest in theater and puppetry. The workshop will focus on various aspects of stage movement, ensemble acting, and telling stories through the creation and manipulation of unique and everyday objects to tell stories. Workshop participants will actively engage in a collaborative effort, sharing their ideas and visions as they work together to create a unique, original performance (registration for the workshop is required; please see link for registration form under 鈥淪chedule and Registration鈥). On Saturday, Nov. 16th (7-9PM), workshop participants will share the results of their explorations with the BC community and the general public at the Bonn Studio Theater.

At BC Ibragimov will also give two presentations in Russian (with English translation) for students and faculty in BC鈥檚 Russian and Slavic Studies programs, as well as members of the broader BC community, on the history and cultural traditions of the Circassians and other indigenous peoples of Russia鈥檚 North Caucasus region. It should be noted that a majority of ethnic Circassians now live outside their original homeland, in Turkey, Syria, Jordan, Israel and other countries - a result of Russia鈥檚 ruthless campaign of ethnic cleansing following its conquest of the northwest Caucasus in the latter half of the 19th century. As space is limited, members of the BC community wishing to attend either of these presentations (11/12, 12:00鈥1:15, location: Devlin 218, 11/15, 11:00-11:50, location: Devlin 218) are asked to contact Curt Woolhiser (woolhise@bc.edu).

Schedule and Registration

Monday,聽November 11, 2024聽 |聽Devlin 218 | Please聽register聽to attend

5:00-8:00 PM聽

Workshop 鈥淎nimating the Inanimate鈥

Tuesday,聽November 12, 2024聽 |聽Devlin 218 | Please聽register聽to attend

12:00 AM-1:15 PM

Presentation on Circassian History and Culture

5:00-8:00 PM聽

Workshop 鈥淎nimating the Inanimate鈥

Wednesday,聽November 13, 2024聽 | Devlin 218 | Please聽register聽to attend

5:00-8:00 PM聽

Workshop 鈥淎nimating the Inanimate鈥

Thursday,聽November 14, 2024聽 |聽Devlin 218 | Please聽register聽to attend

5:00-8:00 PM聽

Workshop 鈥淎nimating the Inanimate鈥

Friday,聽November 15, 2024聽 |聽Devlin 218 & Bonn Studio Theater | Please聽register聽to attend

11:00-11:50 AM

Presentation on Circassian History and Culture |聽Devlin 218

7:00-9:00 PM

Circassian Puppet Play, 鈥淎n Old Tale: The Legend of Happiness鈥 | Bonn Studio Theater

Saturday,聽November 16, 2024聽 |聽Bonn Studio Theater | Please聽register聽to attend

7:00-9:00 PM

Showcase performance with workshop participants

For further information, please contact Curt Woolhiser.

Speakers

Evgeny Ibragimov (Shaoukh Ibragim)

Evgeny Ibragimov (Shaoukh Ibragim)

Evgeny Ibragimov (Shaoukh Ibragim), is an award-winning director, playwright, puppeteer, and stage designer. In addition to puppet theaters throughout the Russian Federation, Ibragimov has staged productions in the Czech Republic and Estonia, and has collaborated with theaters in France, the US, Poland, Serbia, Egypt, and Turkey, among other countries. Ibragimov has won numerous awards for his work, including the Golden Mask Award (2015), the most prestigious award for theater arts in Russia.

Ibragimov has also worked with directors, actors and artists from other indigenous minority communities in Russia, including Khakassia in southern Siberia, where he served as director of the National Khakassian Puppet Theatre in Abakan, and where he organized the International 鈥淐hir Chaajan鈥 (Spirit of the Earth) Eco-Ethnic Puppet Festival, bringing together indigenous performers from various parts of Siberia.

An important focus of Ibragimov鈥檚 work, beginning with his noteworthy debut, 鈥淛udas Iscariot. Traitor鈥, has been the relationship between creation and the Creator, when, at the moment of the creation of the world 鈥 whether on a personal or cosmic scale 鈥 the seed of final catastrophe is planted: betrayal, death, apocalypse. Ibragimov鈥檚 most recent productions are immersive in nature, in which puppets participate on par with objects, human actors, shadows, and the audience must navigate disorienting dark spaces (鈥淒on Quixote. Aftertaste,鈥 鈥淭he Snow Maiden鈥).


Polina Dubovikova

Polina Dubovikova

Polina Dubovikova (actress and translator)聽is a Boston-based actress,聽singer and translator. She is an active member of Arlekin Players Theatre acting company (Needham, MA). Most recently Polina appeared in Arlekin Theatre鈥檚 productions聽The Dybbuk (Dead Soul),聽Just Tell No One (She),聽补苍诲听The Gaaga (Putin).聽Other productions include聽Insulted. Belarus(sia),聽Witness,聽A Dictionary of Emotions in Wartime,聽The Tale of the聽Fisherman and the Fish,聽and聽One Hour, Eighteen Minutes.聽She is also a member of the Boston-based Slavic folklore ensemble Grunya.聽

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Circassian Puppet Play: 鈥淎n Old Tale: The Legend of Happiness

Circassian Puppet Play: 鈥淎n Old Tale: The Legend of Happiness鈥
Friday, November 15, 7-9 PM | Bonn Studio Theatre, Boston College

Evgeny Ibragimov on 鈥淎n Old Tale鈥:

A walnut baton, adorned with sprigs of hazelnut, is raised aloft, and the melodies instantly die away ... the circle of dancers scatters, the crowd of spectators, like a single organism, absorbs them and creates a new circle. In its center there is a man holding a baton.

"Forgive me if I make a mistake, I鈥檓 telling you what I heard ...", he begins quietly, in a slightly singsong voice.

"A folk tale!"

Folk tales are an indispensable part of the dzhegu, the Circassian festival or carnival. In Europe, carnivals were held once a year, plunging people into a riot of merrymaking and general jubilation. The wise Circassians performed dzhegu on all significant occasions: weddings, births deaths, battles. It was believed that this was a way to bring good luck. The Dzhegu was at the same time the best form of communication with God, a way to unite people, and a manifestation of the conviction that a person is not a toy in the hands of fate, but can win her favor.

The Circassian dzhegu is merriment, songs, dances, horse riding, impromptu performance, and the dzheguako manages this carnival whirlwind. He is a demiurge and director, master of ceremonies and conductor, storyteller, priest and magician. During the carnival, it is he who directs the energy of the assembled people. Mocking, talented and wise, but most importantly - free. One of the few, he can tell the truth to anyone, regardless of rank. Jeguakos have always been above society. They composed songs that made up the ornament of an entire people鈥檚 hjistory, and they did it with talent and honesty. From these songs, many years later, their descendants will learn whether their great-great-grandfather was brave or cowardly, stingy or generous, and what deeds he performed.

And the dzheguako knew all the folk tales. Folk tales are a national treasure of any country. For thousands of years, the tales of the peoples of the Caucasus have passed on to new generations the wisdom that guides them on the right path in life, the path of patience, benevolence, and harmony. Dzheguako have always found time at the carnival to tell a tale that is needed here and now.

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