
The Seagull (Die Möwe)
by Anton Chekhov
German translation by Angela Schanelec
Teacher Semyon loves Masha, but Masha loves Konstantin, who in turn loves Nina. And she loves Trigorin, the writer who loves only himself. Chekhov’s bittersweet comedy The Seagull is about love enduring misfortune and unhappiness, about escaping provincial life, and about the production of art itself. The play reflects Chekhov’s assertion about himself and his fellow writers that:
“We describe life as it is and stop dead right there. We wouldn't lift a hoof if you lit into us with a whip. We have neither immediate nor remote goals, and there is an emptiness in our souls. We have no politics, we don't believe in revolution, there is no God, we're not afraid of ghosts, and I personally am not even afraid of death or blindness. If you want nothing, hope for nothing, and fear nothing, you cannot be an artist.”
In The Seagull, Chekhov successfully reflects the emotional misery people suffer in their everyday lives and the materially-saturated society which leaves them spiritually running on empty. And the playwright does this in a way that’s both humorous and ridiculous.
Following his highly-acclaimed Deutsches Theater production of Uncle Vanya, Jürgen Gosch gave Chekhov fans another reason to celebrate with his staging of The Seagull. In 2009, it was invited to Berlin’s Theatertreffen – a festival honouring the year’s best German-language theatre productions. The Seagull was also voted “Production of the Year 2009” by the critics’ poll in trade journal Theater Heute (Theatre Today).
Teacher Semyon loves Masha, but Masha loves Konstantin, who in turn loves Nina. And she loves Trigorin, the writer who loves only himself. Chekhov’s bittersweet comedy The Seagull is about love enduring misfortune and unhappiness, about escaping provincial life, and about the production of art itself. The play reflects Chekhov’s assertion about himself and his fellow writers that:
“We describe life as it is and stop dead right there. We wouldn't lift a hoof if you lit into us with a whip. We have neither immediate nor remote goals, and there is an emptiness in our souls. We have no politics, we don't believe in revolution, there is no God, we're not afraid of ghosts, and I personally am not even afraid of death or blindness. If you want nothing, hope for nothing, and fear nothing, you cannot be an artist.”
In The Seagull, Chekhov successfully reflects the emotional misery people suffer in their everyday lives and the materially-saturated society which leaves them spiritually running on empty. And the playwright does this in a way that’s both humorous and ridiculous.
Following his highly-acclaimed Deutsches Theater production of Uncle Vanya, Jürgen Gosch gave Chekhov fans another reason to celebrate with his staging of The Seagull. In 2009, it was invited to Berlin’s Theatertreffen – a festival honouring the year’s best German-language theatre productions. The Seagull was also voted “Production of the Year 2009” by the critics’ poll in trade journal Theater Heute (Theatre Today).
Premiere December 20, 2008
Duration: 2 hours 40 minutes, one intermission
Duration: 2 hours 40 minutes, one intermission
Corinna HarfouchIrina Nikolayevna Arkadina

Jirka ZettKonstantin Gavrilovich Treplyov
Christian GrashofPeter Sorin

Kathleen MorgeneyerNina Mikhailovna Zarechnaya

Bernd StempelIlya Afanasyevich Shamrayev

Simone von ZglinickiPolina Andryevna

Meike DrosteMasha

Alexander KhuonBoris Alexeyevich Trigorin

Peter PagelYevgeny Sergeyevich Dorn, a doctor
Christoph FrankenSemyon Semyonovich Medvedenko

Ben ClarkJarkow
Przemek ZybowskiA cook

Theresa SchützA chambermaid
Irina Nikolayevna Arkadina
Konstantin Gavrilovich Treplyov
Peter Sorin
Nina Mikhailovna Zarechnaya
Ilya Afanasyevich Shamrayev
Polina Andryevna
Masha
Boris Alexeyevich Trigorin
Yevgeny Sergeyevich Dorn, a doctor
Semyon Semyonovich Medvedenko
Ben Clark
Jarkow
A cook
Theresa Schütz
A chambermaid
What's on
With English surtitles
Forever Yin Forever Young
A Funny van Dannen Evening
Director: Tom Kühnel and Jürgen Kuttner
Kammerspiele
19.30 - 22.10
sold out
perh. remaining tickets at evening box office
perh. remaining tickets at evening box office
With English surtitles
Director: Anne Lenk
Deutsches Theater
20.00 - 21.55