36
> page 1 >> A new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people (and the adults in their lives) WORDS TO LIVE IN

Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

 

Citation preview

Page 1: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

Toneelmakerij zaaldo 16 mei, vrij 17 mei 17.30 uur > page 1

>>

A new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people

(and the adults in their lives)

WORDSTO LIVE IN

Page 2: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

> page 2 Introduction

Theatre’s more about experiencing than about understandingAt the end of the 1970s a refreshing breeze blew across the Dutch theatre landscape. Social engagement took centre stage, and plays moved out of the theatre and into the wider world, to audiences in factories, prisons and care homes. There was continual research into new dramatic forms, and the connections between actor and audience became increasingly direct and personal. All around the country, small communities of artists emerged that had a serious focus on making theatre for children and young people. This was a spectacular choice given the era in which it took place, because there was little interest at the time in this form of theatre – and little prestige associated with it. Although these theatre makers were intensely occupied with social issues, they also explored new theatrical forms and artistic angles. Initially they operated as collectives and most of their plays emerged out of improvisation, but a desire soon arose for excellence, for higher quality, so they became increasingly specialised as actors, directors and writers. This small band was united by a single common objective: to champion theatre that took children seriously on matters of both content and artistic quality. From here on in, childhood would no longer be viewed merely as a succession of joyful moments. These theatre makers took a loupe to children’s position in society, and to the questions, experiences and issues that adults were not discussing. Children were to be viewed not as ‘makeable’ beings that simply required education but as full equals to adults. There was no need to be condescending when reaching out to young audiences because children live in the same world as adults, a world full of contradictions. Inspiration was also drawn from how children perceive the world around them so associatively and intuitively. The taboos surrounding certain subjects and theatrical forms evaporated – at least, as far as the theatre makers themselves were concerned. Many plays caused controversy, triggering the full gamut of reactions, but one question in particular: ‘Is this suitable for children?’ It’s still asked to this day, but it didn’t stand in the way of those first, pioneering theatre makers as they explored the

potential of theatre for young audiences, pushing at its boundaries.

The most prominent playwrights of that first generation were Roel Adam, Ad de Bont, Hans van de Boom, Suzanne van Lohuizen, Pauline Mol and Heleen Verburg. Through their plays, they made a huge contribution to theatre for young audiences – and most of them continue to do so. But they are no longer celebrated solely as writers for young people. After some years the initial indifference swung around 180 degrees and interest in this entirely distinctive movement started growing among theatres, the press, funding organisations and those producing theatre for adults. With all due modesty, it must be said that the experiments that took place in the realm of theatre for young audiences have been hugely valuable in the development of playwriting in the Netherlands. Plays such as “Mirad, een jongen uit Bosnië” by Ad de Bont and “De dag dat mijn broer niet thuis kwam” by Roel Adam tackled social issues, while both “Moeder in de Wolken” by Heleen Verburg and Suzanne van Lohhuizen’s “Heb je mijn kleine jongen niet gezien” had a more absurdist take on the world. There were new adaptations of adult works from all over the world, including “Iphigeneia Koningskind” by Paulien Mol and “Carmen” by Hans van de Boom, alongside poetic works packed with linguistic experimentation, such as “Een lek in het zwijgen” by Roel Adam, Ad de Bont’s “de Hompelaar” and “Het jaar van de haas” by Hans van den Boom. And then there are the classroom plays such as “Vaders en Eieren” by Heleen Verburg, offbeat adaptations of fairy tales, like “Dag Monster” by Paulien Mol; philosophical texts including “Spinoza in Exile” by Roel Adam and Suzanne van Lohuizen’s “Het huis van mijn leven”; great epic tales from around the world, such as “Mehmet de Veroveraar” by Ad de Bont; as well as comedies like “De Tantes” by Roel Adam. In short, children’s theatre has yielded plays of every genre.

And there was also great interest from abroad in what was being produced by these directors and writers in the Netherlands. The ground-breaking

Page 3: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

Toneelmakerij zaaldo 16 mei, vrij 17 mei 17.30 uur > page 3

>>

Theatre’s more about experiencing than about understanding

Liesbeth Coltof(artistic director of Toneelmakerij)

Paulien Geerlings (dramaturge at Toneelmakerij)

work carried out by the National Theaterinstituut, prompted foreign theatre and festival directors to come and experience this ‘small Dutch wonder’ for themselves. Invitations from abroad followed and the plays were translated and performed all over the world, long before compatriot playwrights for adult audiences gained international attention. And soon enough the walls came down between theatre for adult and young audiences, with authors such as Don Duyns (“Lang en gelukkig”), Ko van den Bosch (“Huisvuil”), Oscar van Woensel (“Bacher”), Esther Gerritsen (“Alles”) and Peer Wittenbols (“Waakhondje”) meeting the challenge of writing for young people and producing marvellous work.

The legacy of this artistic explosion – a generation of playwrights focusing on young audiences – is a fertile breeding ground for a new generation of writers with an important message: there are no limits to the imagination; anything and everything is possible for young audiences as long as you follow your heart and feel a genuine connection with them. This online publication is our platform for proudly presenting a new generation of Dutch playwrights writing for young audiences. As they so clearly demonstrate, the art of theatre writing is alive and well. Like their predecessors, they are audacious and highly imaginative, and the diversity of their approaches is astonishing. They also develop themselves in other areas: some write for adults as well as children and teenagers; some are working on books; others are columnists. Alongside the Dutch writers presented here, we are also introducing four emerging talents from other countries – England, Germany and Norway – who all participated in the European Writers Lab. We hope that our readers feel inspired to read the plays, stage them, and commission new works; there is great talent here, but the practice of a great many writers relies on the interest and support of those working in the field of theatre for young audiences, both here in the Netherlands and abroad.

We hope you thoroughly enjoy your first encounter with these writers.

Page 4: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

> page 4 Jorieke Abbing

Beste Sneeuw 8 Dear Snow Pomme, nurse of crushed hearts, is doing everything in her power to repair the broken love between her mother and father: her mother, proud and fearless with a loud laugh, who only believes it when she sees it. Her father, the gentle man with his deep, undulating, darkly aromatic whiskey breath. Pomme knows the snow is coming for her – because she lies to her father about how her mother misses him, and because she doesn’t tell her mother that her father is still in his pyjamas. But stopping lying would mean war, and nobody wants that. Then her mother meets the Russian man Andrej – just like that – while out shopping. Pomme can’t let that happen. So when Andrej comes around and they cuddle up on the sofa, Pomme sort of sets fire to his jacket a little bit. Her mother is furious. Meanwhile, her father’s standing on the roof of the town hall, wearing a superhero costume. He wants increased access to his child. It’s a nightmare. Pomme realises that she has failed. It’s time to run away, to go looking for a place where people don’t need her help. To the ice. Blow, wind, blow, everything can go. She wakes up, wrapped in a blanket, in between her parents. This is the moment that everything turns out right. And her parents lie: Everything will be all right.

Jorieke Abbing Jorieke Abbing (1983) completed her Writing for

Performance studies at Utrecht School of the Arts in 2007. Her graduation piece “Beste Sneeuw” won the three-yearly Van der Vies award for Best Dutch Play in 2008 and the international Kaas & Kappes award

in 2009.

Jorieke’s has had work commissioned by NT Jong, Het Filiaal, Toneelgroep Oostpool, Tuning

People, Jeugdtheater Hofplein and Filmmuseum Amsterdam. At Toneelmakerij she worked together with director Roeland Hofman on two productions

with TM Jong, the company’s youth theatre ensemble. Jorieke has also collaborated with her

sister on two productions: “Aan die komen” and “Hier komt de nacht”, based on true stories about

Groningen during the Second World War.

Page 5: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

Toneelmakerij zaaldo 16 mei, vrij 17 mei 17.30 uur > page 5

>>

DIETER Where is mum?

POMME Don’t cry.

DIETERWhere?

POMME At home – knitting or something.

DIETER She didn’t want to come.

POMME The scarf had to be finished.

DIETER I understand.

POMME What’s a winter without a scarf?

DIETER She doesn’t give a gnat’s nose about me. Tell me the truth.

POMME Daddy no, yes she does give a nose.

DIETER Why doesn’t she come if she misses me so much? And why am I never invited over for tea? Is there something wrong with your kettle? That’s not it isn’t it? I know. To her I’m a... a—

POMME Please.

DIETER A drop in the ocean is what I am.

POMME Look what I brought you. Pickles and yoghurt for your daily vitamins.

DIETER I’m not here.

POMMENot even for a pickle?

(Translator: Alexander Peterhans)

Play detailsAge: 8+ Cast: 3 (1 man, 1 woman, 1 girl)Available language(s): Dutch, English

Other plays by this authorCloverAudience age: 9+Cast: 3 (1 boy, 2 girls)Available language(s): Dutch, English

Jagtlust SmaglustAge: 14+Cast: 15 Available language(s): DutchAdditional information: based on the book “Jagtlust” by Annejet van der Zijl

Halve Mens (Half-Human)Age: 14+Cast: 3Available language(s): Dutch

Trollenjong (Troll Child)Audience age: 4+Cast: 2Available language(s): Dutch

Verona aan de Rijn (Verona on the Rijn)Audience age: 14+Cast: 50Available language(s): Dutch

Lucy Loves Ringo StarrAudience age: 8+Cast: 2Available language(s): Dutch

Het Meisje en de Engel (The Girl and the Angel)Audience age: 6+Cast: 2Available language(s): Dutch

[email protected]

Extra News! Jorieke is the Dutch participant in the European Writers Lab 2014-2015. To read more go to page 26-27.

Page 6: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

> page 6 Rik van den Bos

Rik van den BosRik van den Bos was born in 1982, and in 2008 the completed his

Writing for Performance studies at Utrecht School of the Arts. He was awarded the Verse Tekst scholarship in 2009 and in 2010 the Charlotte Köhler scholarship for most promising theatre author of the preceding five years. His stories reveal the goings-on behind our society’s walls, in a narrative form that always seeks out the modern and the topical.

Rik writes for several major Dutch repertory companies including Ro Theater, NNT Groningen and Toneelgroep Oostpool, and smaller

ensembles such as Bellevue Lunchtheater, Toneelschuur Producties, Veenfabriek and his own group BERG&BOS, where he works together

with Maurits van den Berg.Rik is an affiliate of the Verlag der Autoren in Frankfurt. His texts are

published by De Nieuwe Toneelbibliotheek and International Theatre & Film Books.

Wij Zijn Grijs Gebied We Are Grey Area Jessica and Sarah return home disillusioned the day their grandma dies. Her eyes were barely closed when the family started sharing out her possessions. Such greed! Those grabbing hands! It’s made them feel sick. And now they realise the world is a much less beautiful place than all those adults have been pretending for the last fourteen years. It’s a paradise that never was. Jessica and Sarah promise one another that they will not forget, and they swear not to be misled. They don’t want to be like those others. They decide that they can do it differently. They know there’ll be shit to deal with, so they’d better get prepared for it. The sisters withdraw to their secret attic and – in a protest against hypocrisy – they start training. With a cast-iron faith in the power of change and positivity they plunge into the great questions of life: “Is it possible to live according to your principles and ideals? How do you ensure that other people follow your example? How do you go about making a difference in the world, once the fog around your head has dissipated?” But when Jessica and Sarah start pushing each other to put their principles into action, it looks like all their good intentions will be derailed.

photo > Bob Bronshoff

Page 7: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

Toneelmakerij zaaldo 16 mei, vrij 17 mei 17.30 uur > page 7

>>

Day 1, After GrandmaJESSICASo that’s how it works.

SARAHUh-huh.

JESSICAThis is how it ends.

SARAHAt least Auntie Emmy behaved alright.

JESSICAAuntie Emmy?Auntie Emmy?You’ve got to be kidding, Sarah.You think that was alright?Auntie Emmy was eating her way out of her problems. The moment she feels an emotion she stuffs ‘something tasty’ in her mouth. And it’s not just because grandma died. That’s what Auntie Emmy always does. Auntie Emmy can’t stomach life without food.That’s Auntie Emmy all over. A sort of passageway for food. Nothing more.Probably Auntie Emmy ‘behaved alright’, because she’s not even interested in a memento. Maybe it’s even worse that Auntie Emmy didn’t join in. Auntie Emmy isn’t interested in old junk. She’s happy to wait until the inheritance is on her bank account. Then she can go shopping. That’s Auntie Emmy.

SARAHSo that’s how people are.That’s how we are.

JESSICAWe’re not.

SARAH [sceptical tone]But you saw how we behaved this afternoon.

JESSICABut we didn’t do that.

SARAHNo. It was our family.Do you know how big the chance is that we’ll turn out like them?

JESSICAI don’t want that.

SARAHNo, me neither. No.

JESSICABut I really don’t want it, you get me? I’m not going to do it. I’m not going to turn out like that.I swear. I promise.

SARAHOh come on, take a good look. It already started way back.We’re already that way.Remember when little Rudy ran off with that book – the one grandma always read us?

JESSICAWhat have you done??

Play detailsAudience age: 14+Cast: 2 (women)Available language(s): Dutch

Other plays by this author Leger (Running On Empty)Audience age: 16+Cast: 2 (men)Available language(s): Dutch, English, German

CookiesAudience age: 15+Cast: 3 (2 men, 1 woman)Available language(s): Dutch

[email protected]+31(0)633036869

Page 8: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

> page 8 Floris van Delft and Wolter Muller

Floris van Delft and Wolter Muller

Floris van Delft and Wolter Muller, born in 1976 and 1974 respectively, came together as a writing duo in 2008, having met one another at

Noord Nederlands Toneel, where Wolter acted and Floris directed. They share a fondness for theatre that is direct, raw and of its time.

After their stint at NNT they embarked on adapting classic texts and writing new ones for young audiences. Their plays often address

audiences directly – challenging them to interact – and are packed with references to films, television series and current affairs. They

pull out all the stops to get spectators thinking about subjects such as revenge, money and the crisis. Floris directs their texts, but they are both keen to write for other theatre makers. "Cash" was produced by

Maas theatre and dance company.

CASH 2Follow the money!Sinan is an ambitious young bank employee whose future is in tatters now he’s been fired because of the crisis. He can’t get a job anywhere. Frustrated, he decides to take his fate into his own hands and rob the bank for which he once worked. In classic heist movie style, he assembles a colourful team for a one-off job: a smart leader, an idealistic hacker, a cunning old safecracker and an inside man – or woman in this case. Together with the audience, they look into how to rob a bank nowadays, how the crisis arose, and who is the biggest victim – turns out it’s the young generation in the audience that’s going to have to make do with less. Along the way the plan gets undermined by jealousy, love and treachery. Sinan needs to find out whom he can trust if the heist is going to succeed. Trust is the only thing that kept the financial system together, and trust is the only thing keeping the group together. But the challenge is made all the greater by the lure of huge financial profits.

photo's > Peter Valckx, Ruud Pos

Page 9: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

Toneelmakerij zaaldo 16 mei, vrij 17 mei 17.30 uur > page 9

>>

Act 1, Scene 1[Blackout. Sound of shots being fired; people screaming. Lights on. SINAN, dressed in a suit, is standing on a table. He is pointing his fingers at people, as if they were guns.]

SINAN/BANK EMPLOYEENow pay attention everyone. The manager of this bank will now slowly get up from his chair and say: “Mister Eroglu we’d like you to work for us, no... to work with us. Your interview was very compelling. We can’t imagine a better candidate for the job. What are your salary demands?” Someone’s going to say that right now, or else....[leaps from the table.]Am I being unreasonable? These? [Referring to the pistols; he puts them away] This is a fantasy. This is what you’d really want to do, when you’ve heard your fifteenth “We’re sorry to have to tell you that you won’t be getting the job”. Listen, you plonker, sad act, I don’t want your [BEEP] job anymore. You can stuff that [BEEP] job and this... [He loosens his necktie] up your [BEEP] and go [BEEP] yourself. I used to have a job you know. Hang on, I had a life – a good life that was only getting better.

(Translator: Neal Lewis)

Play details Audience age: 12+ / 14+ Cast: 4 (3 men, 1 women)Available language(s): Dutch, German

Other plays by these authorsKrijg nou Titus! (Eat This, Titus!)Audience age: 12+Cast: 5 (4 men, 1 woman)Available language(s): DutchAdditional information: a radical reworking of Shakespeare’s “Titus Andronicus”

Vloek (Curse)Audience age: 12+Cast: 5 (2 men and 3 women) Available language(s): DutchAdditional information: adapted from “Elektra”

Contact [email protected]+31 (0) 6 24877631

[email protected]+31 (0) 6 50575981

Page 10: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

> page 10 Simon van der Geest

Simon van der GeestSimon van der Geest (1978) trained as a playwright and theatre

teacher at Utrecht School of the Arts (HKU) and studied in Norway for a year. He writes music-based plays, as well as books and poetry,

preferably for children. Simon enjoys drawing his inspiration from the classics. Recurrent themes in his work include losing one’s way,

secrets, storytelling, the Dutch landscape and insects. He often writes about children far away from the adult world.

Simon has written plays for many ensembles, including Theatergroep Kwatta, Holland Opera, Het Laagland, Theater Gnaffel and

Onafhankelijk Toneel. His volume of poetry for young people, “Dissus”, which is loosely based on the Odyssey, won the prestigious Gouden

Griffel award, as did his book for young readers “Spinder”, which is based on the eponymous play about a boy with a secret insect

basement. Simon wrote the book given away during the Netherlands’ annual children’s book week in 2015. As well as writing, he visits

schools and libraries, gives lectures and teaches writing for theatre.

MijN VRIEND WORDT SOMS EEN NEUSHOORN 7My Friend Sometimes Turns Into a Rhinoceros Nico doesn’t speak much. Luckily Ro and Hinki are always nearby, and they know exactly what he wants. Nico is their friend, a friend with a ginormous secret: sometimes, Nico turns into a rhinoceros. No one can tell when it’s coming, except for Hinki and Ro, that is – they can tell by his nostrils. Nico has got a really special mother with very long legs, and his father is almost never around. Upstairs at Nico’s mother’s house, Hinki and Ro have secretly built a hut where they can keep watch – because you never know when other men might be coming round. That’s how it is, and that’s how it stays – until, that is, the arrival of the Girl. Her mother is French and her lips are soft. Hinki and Ro realise there’s a danger because before you know it, you might be growing long plaits. But the Girl stays – even when The Big Rip starts. The Window Cleaner used to be sponging Nico’s mother’s windows all the time. But then he fell. A rhinoceros walked into his ladder. Hinki’s father won’t let him play with Nico anymore. But when the ground splits in two, you’ve got to make a choice. And what does a father know about rhinoceroses, anyway?

photo > Chris van Houts

Page 11: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

Toneelmakerij zaaldo 16 mei, vrij 17 mei 17.30 uur > page 11

>>

HINKIAnd then there’s a father, toobut actually there isn’tbecause he’s almost never there

ROThat’s because this father is some kind of office guard

HINKIat a bank

ROSomething to do with computers

HINKIAnyway, it’s really complicatedIt’s so difficult. There are so many calculations that his head just keeps on getting heavier and heavierOne day, he could barely carry it home His secretary had to help So he mostly slept at work On his desk

Play detailsAudience age: 7+Cast: 4 (3 men, 1 woman)Available language(s): Dutch

Other plays by this authorPuddingtarzan (Rubber Tarzan)Audience age: 6+Cast: 3 (men)Available language(s): DutchAdditional information: adapted from the eponymous book by Ole Lund Kirkegaard. The text includes song lyrics.

Dissus – verdwaal mee in de Odyssee (Dissus – Join the Odyssey)Audience age: 8+ Cast: 8 (7 men, 1 woman – all actors must also be singers) Available language(s): DutchAdditional information: music theatre version of “Dissus”, the book of poetry for young people by Simon van der Geest (text almost unaltered).

Gedonderdag (Thunder Day)Audience age: 7+Cast: 3 (2 men, 1 woman and a large number of puppets) Available language(s): Dutch

Zapp Mattheus Audience age: 8+Cast: 2 (2 actors and an orchestra)Available language(s): Dutch

Ver Weg en Vlak Bij (Far Away and Very Close)Audience age: 4+Cast: 2 Available language(s): Dutch

iPromiseAudience age: 12+Cast: 2 (men)Available language(s): Dutch

Iemand is ‘m Niemand is ‘m (Somebody's Move Nobody's Move)Audience age: 8+ Cast: 4 (2 men, 2 women)Available language(s): Dutch, English

Zwanenmeer (Swan Lake)Audience age: 7+Cast: 3 (1 man, 2 women – all cast members must also be singers)Available language(s): DutchAdditional information: the text is a libretto, freely adapted from Tchaikovsky’s “Swan Lake” and “The Wild Swans” by Hans Christian Andersen.

SpinderAudience age: 8+, Cast: 1 (man)Available language(s): Dutch, German

PenelopeAudience age: 12+Cast: 14 (12 girls, 1 woman, 1 man)Available language(s): DutchAdditional information: theatre text with song lyrics

[email protected]

Page 12: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

> page 12 Daniël van Klaveren

Daniël van KlaverenActor, director and writer Daniël van Klaveren was born in 1983 and

graduated in 2005 from the acting department of the Utrecht School of the Arts (HKU). Existing sources form the basis for much of his

work, which often focuses on the struggle to follow one’s own path in a world that demands other things from you. Recent works include “Zus

van Mozart” and “Jamal”, about a radicalised secondary school pupil and his counsellor.

Daniël began his career at the Volksoperahuis, Laagland and Filiaal ensembles. His love of producing work for young people first gained

full expression at Theatergroep Wederzijds. He was a permanent member of the Toneelmakerij ensemble from 2008 to 2012. Since 2013 he has been working for other companies as well, including Opera Zuid,

Tafel van Vijf, Nieuw Utrechts Toneel, Acteerschool Rotterdam, the HKU and STIP theaterproducties where he produced ´Zus van Mozart´.

ZUS VAN MOZART 7 (Mozart’s Sister)Nannerl Mozart is a musical prodigy, a virtuoso pianist and violinist from the age of three. Then her little brother Wolfie is born. At the age of three he climbs up to sit next to her at the piano and plays along with her. The music he plays is out of this world. Their father decides to take them away from dreary Salzburg. They travel around Europe and perform before the great and the good of the world. And then one day her father meets the earl Gabrieli, who persuades him to obey the demands of the market and the audience; Wolfgang has a great future, but no girl should perform onstage.From that moment onwards Wolfie is the main act, with Nannerl accompanying. She becomes furious and Wolfie promises to speak up for her. But when their father presents his latest plan – to compose a three-hour opera in Rome – Wolfie is silenced by the promise of immortal success. His journey continues and Nannerl stays behind in Salzburg. They write letters to one another, but gradually grow apart.In Salzburg, Nannerl sees so many people who mean something to someone but are nonetheless forgotten. Does it mean that their life has less value? Slowly but surely she grows to be happy that she is one of them. They may be forgotten, but they do matter. Wolfgang dies destitute at the age of 35, while Nannerl becomes a piano teacher and preserves his music, the music angels play in their free time, simply for its sheer beauty.

photo > Ivo van der Bent

Page 13: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

Toneelmakerij zaaldo 16 mei, vrij 17 mei 17.30 uur > page 13

>>

From the first scene WOLFGANGWhy don’t you tell them how proud I am of you?[Pause]You were already playing the piano at three.Have you forgotten about that?

NANNERLHow could I have forgotten?

WOLFGANGIf you don’t tell them, I will. My sister was the true wonder.That’s what I thought, right from the very start.

When I was squealing like a pig in my crib the only thing that would calm mewas the distant sound of the piano being played by my big sister.

The moment I could crawl I crawled there because I needed to hear it from close by. And I couldn’t believe it. This wonder conjures sound from wood!For hours at a time I lay listening under her piano.I suckled on the music as if it was mother’s milk.

And when at last I could walkI walked my first stumbling steps to Nannerl and watched as her fingers moved over the keys.I want that, too, I thought.I want to do what that wonder does!

NANNERLAnd so you have.

WOLFGANGI have met many musicians in my life but you were the very best.Speak about it!Why is it that no one knows anymore?

NANNERLYes.At what point are you so important that no one forgets you after you die? What must you do to remain even after you’re gone?How does one become immortal?

You know.And it cannot be told often enough:

This is the story of my little brother,who lived on after his death.

WOLFGANGNo.

This is the story of my sister,who should never have been forgotten.

Play detailsAudience age: 7+Cast: 2 up to 4Available language(s): Dutch

Other plays by this authorJust in CaseAudience age: 12+Cast: 2 Available language(s): DutchAdditional information: stage adaptation of the eponymous book by Meg Rosoff

JamalAudience age: 12+Cast: 2 (men)Available language(s): Dutch, English, GermanAdditional information: freely adapted from the work of Gus van Sant and the stories of radicalised young people

RosalindeAudience age: 7+Cast: 5 (5 actors, 1 puppet)Available language(s): DutchAdditional information: adaptation of Shakespeare’s “As You Like It”

[email protected]

Page 14: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

> page 14 Anouk Saleming

Anouk SalemingAnouk Saleming was born in 1977 and studied drama teaching. After

graduating she wanted to start making plays with and for children and adolescents, but she was unable to find any suitable texts. And

when she had the actors improvise she found that they didn’t generate texts of sufficient quality. So Anouk followed up her studies at Utrecht

School of the Arts, specialising in playwriting.

The stories Anouk writes for children always have a touch of magical realism about them, with a singing whale in the kitchen; a girl who

discovers she’s got a motor where her heart should be; and an angry circus master who is sent in an envelope to the North Pole to

cool down. She has written plays for several ensembles, including Stella Den Haag, Jeugdtheater Kwatta, Het Lab Utrecht and her own

company Komma4. Her play "Runnin’ Blue" won the International Kaas & Kappes Ward in 2012.

BOBBIE EN ZORA 4 Bobbie lives alone. He likes everything to be calm and neat and tidy; he doesn’t like creases in his life. The garden gate is shut tight, and the curtains are drawn. Then Zora appears, frightened and hungry. She has fled Mr Mortelli’s circus, where she performs dances on a tightrope. Mr Mortelli’s hands can crush fingers, and his voice stabs like a knife. Zora talks stangely, makes a racket and doesn’t wash her hands – everything Bobbie so dislikes. But when he hears her beautiful singing voice he lets her stay for a sandwich. Bobbie and Zora become friends. Time passes. Zora has almost forgotten Mr Mortelli and his circus, when one night he comes and takes her away. When Bobbie finds out he feels what it is to miss another person, so he decides to bring her back. For the very first time he steps outside his garden fence. He follows Zora’s voice, finds the circus and uses a cunning ruse to defeat Mr Mortelli. Sadly for Bobbie, Zora decides not to come home with him. Instead she goes out into the world to sing about her brave knight Bobbie, her hero.

photo > Maria Stijger

Page 15: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

Toneelmakerij zaaldo 16 mei, vrij 17 mei 17.30 uur > page 15

>>

[Zora is standing among the laundry.Bobbie is startled.]

BOBBIEWhat the…?!

ZORAHello!

BOBBIEI don’t like nutty strangers around my laundry.

ZORAI don’t taste nutty.

BOBBIEBut you are strange.

ZORAStrangederanged and lonelysome.

BOBBIEStrangederanged and lonelysome.Did you not learn to speak properly?

ZORAChitchats and doings and the leftovers of myself.

BOBBIEChitchats and doings?Scandalous!Such disarray.So ill-mannered.Have you washed your hands?

ZORATwo daily before foodtime.

BOBBIEOutrageous.Be gone.Move it.Behind the fence.I don’t know you.Move it.Away with this motley circus.There’ll be no conga dance in my garden.

[Time passes. Zora does not go away.]

BOBBIEAre you still here?

ZORAI want no squabblation, or angrifying, but...

BOBBIESquabblation?Angrifying?What are you talking about?AND KEEP YOUR FILTHY PAWS OFF MY SHEETS!

ZORAMy grumble-tummy’s roaring.I’m star-harving for a sandy witch.

BOBBIEThis is the main thoroughfare.The main tho-rough-fare.Be thorough and fair.Be gone!

ZORAI ask polite-like top-mannered for a meansy-titchy chunk of sandy witch.If you pleasieness?

BOBBIEAn meansy-titchy chunk of what?

ZORASandy witch.

BOBBIEYou mean a sandwich!

ZORAYes, lovely!

BOBBIEVery well then.Just one.With cheese.And then be gone.

ZORAFantasticious!Then I shall fly away like a sandy witch.

>>

Page 16: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

> page 16 Anouk Saleming

Play detailsAudience age: 4+Cast: 2Additional information: text includes song lyrics

Other plays by this authorIk wacht niet, ik FEEST (I’m Not Waiting, I’m PARTYING)Audience age: 5+Cast: 2Available language(s): Dutch

De dromeneter (The Dream Eater)Audience age: 6+Cast: 2Available language(s): Dutch

Het huis van de blauwe dames (The House of the Blue Ladies)Audience age: 5+Cast: 2 to 4Available language(s): Dutch

Zandmannen (Sandmen)Audience age: 8+Cast: 2Available language(s): Dutch

Het verre missen (Distant Missing)Audience age: 6+Cast: 2Available language(s): Dutch

Balleinen Ballade (Whale Ballad)Audience age: 7+Cast: 1Available language(s): Dutch

Het Muilmeisje (The Mule Girl)Audience age: 7+Cast: 1Available language(s): Dutch

Bloedroof (Bloodsteal)Audience age: 15+Cast: 10-16 Available language(s): DutchAdditional information: adaptation of “Medeia” by Euripides.

Het Bos van Dode Liefjes (The Forest of Dead Sweethearts)Audience age: 15+Cast: 8-16 Available language(s): Dutch

BackfireAudience age: 15+Cast: 14 Available language(s): DutchAdditional information: contains biographical information on a variety of young people from different countries. This information can be changed so that future actors can take full ownership of the story.

Runnin’ BlueAudience age: 15+Cast: 11 Available language(s): Dutch, GermanAdditional information: inspired by the film “Lola Rennt” and The Doors’ song “Runnin’ Blue”

Paradepaardjes (Showpieces)Audience age: 15+Cast: 5-10 Available language(s): Dutch

Yasmine versus KhalidAudience age: 15+Cast: 2 (1 girl, 1 boy)Available language(s): DutchAdditional information: the text consists of two monologues written in collaboration with Sofian Abayahya.

[email protected]

Page 17: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

Toneelmakerij zaaldo 16 mei, vrij 17 mei 17.30 uur > page 17

>>

Page 18: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

> page 18 Sofie Tseng

Sofie TsengSofie Tseng was born in 1989 and graduated in 2013 in Writing for

Performance at Utrecht School of the Arts (HKU). Her work assumes that humanity is in essence good but incompetent. Her characters are

awkward and tactless, but loveable nonetheless. Sofie believes that the greatest emotion is generated by humour; the need to laugh at what is

not in fact funny. Her style is clean and controlled, and has a wisdom about it that is both naïve and complex.

Tseng’s plays have been commissioned by, among others, Toneelmakerij, HKU, Tweetakt/Kaap Festival and Parade Festival.

“Andermansplantjes” won her the 2013 ITs Playwriting Award.

ANDERMANSPLANTJES 9(Windowpains)Since Sam’s father died, her mother’s been in her bedroom all the time. All she can do is cry, no matter what Sam does. Just a knock to show a sign of life is too much for her. Allessander (‘You can call me All’), the boy from next door, comes round to ask them to be quiet – all that crying is driving his pregnant mother Anna nuts. Without really being invited to stay, All gives Sam some well-intentioned bits of advice – like when he says that Sam shouldn’t feel rotten just because her father is rotting away. Meanwhile, Frenk the window cleaner is doing his level best to get his work done. But at one house Anna asks him to help assemble the crib, and at the other Sam asks him to bring back her mother, whom Frenk can see through the bedroom window. And All isn’t having it easy either. His mother didn’t want any children at all, so he’s constantly trying as hard as he can to not exist. Sometimes he wonders whether he’s succeeded. So all you can do is bang on the wall and hope that someone hears you; the woman from next door sometimes knocks back. Sam can’t believe what she’s hearing! “Knock if you can hear it, mum. I’ve got no mother, just a stupid dead father.” The door lock clicks open.

photo > Sander Buesink

Page 19: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

Toneelmakerij zaaldo 16 mei, vrij 17 mei 17.30 uur > page 19

>>

[Anna is in her apartment. She’s heavily pregnant and talking to her unborn child]

ANNA So Listen I’m probably not going to do it right Just to let you know I’m going to say the wrong things, Things that stick with you without me knowing it I’ll make tiny cuts and I won’t realize that they’ll turn into scars You can’t blame me for that I will be unreasonable Unreachable And I’m going to find it very hard to accept When you don’t turn out the way I planned You won’t And because of that I won’t be who I want to be for you That’s not my fault I only want the best for you And I’m always going to know what’s best And I’ll forget you I’m going to be really busy sometime And I’ll forget you But that doesn’t mean that that’s what you deserve I hope that when you look at me You’ll feel the love My love for you I hope that means you’re always loved When you become a mother, you become a truth If I say you’re good, you’re good If I say you’re bad, you’re bad If I tell you off, you deserve to be told off If I forget you, you’ll be forgotten That will be your truth If I give you everything, you can take anything If I’m always there, you’re never alone If I hadn’t wanted you, you should not have been here I might forget that we’re not just two people You and I But you are a person and I am your truth I’m probably not going to do it right

(Translator: Sander Buesink)

Play detailsAudience age: 9+ Cast: 4 (2 men, 2 women)Available language(s): Dutch, English

Other plays by this authorOnderstebodem (Upside Ground)Audience age: 7+Cast: 2 (1 man, 1 woman)Available language(s): DutchAdditional information: for performance in a classroom

[email protected] +31 (0)6 14008084

Page 20: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

> page 20 Timen Jan Veenstra

Timen Jan VeenstraTimen Jan Veenstra (1984) attended Utrecht School of the Arts,

obtaining degrees in Drama and Writing for Performance. He subsequently wrote for several prestigious theatre companies,

including Toneelmakerij, Toneelschuur Producties and De Utrechtse Spelen. Veenstra is also one of the founders of the Tekstsmederij,

which provides supports and guidance to gifted young playwrights.

His plays are highly praised for their personal voice, powerful dialogues and sense of social awareness. Although Timen loves writing

contemporary drama, he also reworks classical tragedies, such as his adaptations and translations for today’s audiences of Georg Büchner’s

“Danton’s Death” and Shakespeare’s “Much Ado About Nothing”. Timen is currently working on his first novel “Icarus”, a compelling,

fast-paced thriller about the downfall of a prosperous investment banker and his complex relationship with his father.

Wachten 2(Waiting)A refugee camp. Two refugees. They don’t know whether they’ll be going somewhere or be allowed to stay. They barely know where they are. All they can do is wait for the possibility of a future. Time passes and they try to keep a grip on their lives; try not to give in to the hopelessness of their predicament.

YYou know what the joke is?

XThe joke? No.

YIt’s that I’m sitting behind a pillar, and there are people laying all around me.It’s that soldiers, fighters, murderers, take those people, cut men’s tongues out, torture them, shoot them in the head, pull out their fingernails, hack them with machetes, chop, and beat, and throw the heads away, and that they pile up the bodies by that wall there, that wall, yes, that wall there, and that they’re starting to rot, and I’m still behind that pillar, that one, yes, that pillar over there; that they took my mother, and cut my little brother out of her, beat his skull against that wall, no, not that one, that one, yes, that wall there, and took my mother away, away, away from here, and I’m still there, still there.

And my brother, my elder brother, he’ll save me, he’ll take me away.Do you know what the joke is? XThe joke? Yes. No.

YThe joke is that I’m alive and my mother isn’t, and my father isn’t, and my little sister isn’t, and my little brother isn’t.

XAnd your brother?

YMy brother?

XThe one who saved you.

Page 21: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

Toneelmakerij zaaldo 16 mei, vrij 17 mei 17.30 uur > page 21

>>

YThat brother.

XThat brother.

YHe isn’t either.

XNo.

YNo.

[silence]

XI’ve got a joke too.

YAnother joke... A funny one?

X Yes. You have to join in.

YJoin in?

XDear sir from a big and distant country that’s very rich and celebrates Christmas.

YYes, what is it?

XMy name is Ngbuku.

YHello Ngbuku.

XI am poor and and I need money.

YHere’s some money.

XSomething’s changed.

[they laugh]

YGood joke.

Play detailsAudience age: 12+ Cast: 2 Available language(s): Dutch

Other plays by this author Reis (Journey)Audience age: 8+Cast: 1Available language(s): DutchAdditional information: Monologue based on the story of Andrew McAuley, who died crossing the Tasman Sea in a kayak.

Clyde & BonnieAudience age: 14+Cast: 2Available language(s): DutchAdditional information: translation from German into Dutch of Holger Schober’s “Clyde & Bonnie” for Toneelmakerij

Ontspoord (Derailed)Audience age: 12+Cast: 6Available language(s): DutchAdditional information: translation of Naomi Wallace’s “The Trestle at Pope Lick Creek”, for Toneelmakerij, translated with Paulien Geerlings.

[email protected]

Page 22: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

> page 22 Jibbe Willems

Jibbe WillemsJibbe Willems was born in 1977 and is a graduate of the Maastricht

Academy of Performing Arts. His texts explore the beauty of failure, the fringes of language, and the unattainable state of the sublime,

where suffering and happiness are so intertwined that they cancel one another out and generate solace. Tragedy takes equal place to humour and, like an atheist who misses god, he is always seeking redemption.

Jibbe's work as a playwright has been commissioned by the likes of Nationale Toneel, BonteHond, Hoge Fronten, tgEcho, Toneelgroep

Oostpool, De Utrechtse Spelen, Urban Myth, Frascati, De Toneelschuur, Generale Oost and Theater Bellevue. His plays have been translated

and performed in Russia, Brazil, South Africa, Germany, Spain, Suriname and Belgium. In 2015 he was appointed as the in-house

writer at Toneelgroep Maastricht.

LEO & LENA 9After Leonce und Lena by Georg BüchnerLeo’s father is the Minister of Important Affairs. Lena’s mother is Supreme Boss of the Biggest Business. For the first time in their lives, pampered, loud-mouthed Leo and Lena are being forced to do something against their will. Despite never having met one another, they are to be married. So, independently of one another, they both rebel and run away – into the big wide world, searching for extreme encounters and for true love. Lena leaves with her cautious female friend Valeria; Leo is accompanied by the libertine Valerio. And Rozetta follows in their wake, despite her love for dear darling Leo being unrequited. Along their journey Leo and Lena meet quite by chance and fall head over heels in love. But then they are separated by death. Life leaves them no choice and this leap is their last chance to shape their own fate. But then they discover each other’s true identity. But this, too, need not be an obstacle to their great happiness. “We have time and we have freedom. Just imagine: we were nearly married without even knowing one another’s name! Love cannot be captured in a ring – just as you do not have to flee to be free. Your freedom is within you.”

photo > Willem Popelier

Page 23: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

Toneelmakerij zaaldo 16 mei, vrij 17 mei 17.30 uur > page 23

>>

LENA I want a boy whose eyes are full of adventure. Who can shout himself hoarse, but who can also softly whisper. He must love dogs, be a good horseman, and be able to talk to cats. He should love eating hamburgers with whipped cream (it’s fine if he just pretends) and he will want to compete with me in little contests that he doesn’t always win – and he will be a good loser. And he should write poems that do not rhyme. VALERIA And from which fairy-tale did you pluck this lad? LENA Oh, Valeria, I pity you. You don’t even dare to fantasise.You will remain alone until you are old and dusty, and then you will crumble into nothing more than a little heap of dirt. VALERIAThat’s fine with me, just as long as somebody clears it up. LENA Would you help me anyway to choose what to wear? VALERIA In case your date turns out to be your dream boy, I suppose. LENA Absolutely. Everything is possible if you dare believe in the impossible.

Play details Audience age: 9+Cast: 7 (3 men, 4 women)Available language(s): Dutch

Other plays by this authorRotgod (Bad God)Audience age: 8+Cast: 3 (2 man, 1 woman) Available language(s): Dutch, German

Noem hem Pinocchio (Name Him Pinocchio)Audience age: 15+Cast: 4 to 17 (min. 3 men, 1 woman, max. 16 man, 1 woman or vice versa)Available language(s): Dutch

Apocalypso Audience age: 15+ Cast: min. 6 (min. 3 man, 3 woman up to as many as wanted)Available language(s): Dutch, German (partial version), Russian

Contact www.jibbewillems.nl [email protected] +31 (0) 626040619

Page 24: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

> page 24 Malou de Roy van Zuydewijn

Malou de Roy van Zuydewijn

Malou de Roy van Zuydewijn was born in 1984. She chooses to write for children and young people, for ensembles such as BonteHond,

Filliaal and Het Lab Utrecht. Her work is almost exclusively based on interviews and conversations with children or adolescents with

remarkable stories to tell, and is highly expressive, poetic and physical. She is currently working on her first novel for young readers for Azul

Kids publishers – it was inspired by the story of a 12-year-old boy from Kurdish Iraq.

Malou completed her Writing for Performance bachelors at Utrecht School of the Arts in 2000. From 2011 to 2012, she studied for a

post-bachelor certificate in community arts. In 2013 she received additional training in philosophising with children and adolescents.

Along with writer and playwright Timen Jan Veenstra she co-founded Tekstsmederij, the platform for a new generation of stage writers and

directors.

IK BEN IK 8 (I Am Me)“Who the hell do you think you are?” shouts one of the big boys at Kind. Later, in bed, he can’t sleep. In his dreams he meets the Grey Warrior, a wise old man who tells the story of how the world was full of colour until he found a dead cat. Ever since then, the world has been grey. The only way to do something about it is to bury the cat. But does Kind have the courage to do it? The Grey Warrior puts him in front of the mirror and says, “What do you see?” Kind doesn’t know. The Warrior sends him away, in the company of his trusty hound Hachiko. Along the way Kind meets a brave boy with bright red hair, a girl getting her first hairs under her armpits, a little boy with thick glasses who plays him Beethoven, a bald man with black tattoos who turns out not to be a murderer. Kind finds the cat and buries it, and all the grey in the world dissolves away. Kind returns to the Grey Warrior, only to discover that he is dying. Things change. People and animals come and go.The next morning Kind looks at himself in the mirror and the Grey Warrior in his head asks, “What do you see?” “Myself”, answers Kind, “I see myself.”

photo > Ilja Keizer

Page 25: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

Toneelmakerij zaaldo 16 mei, vrij 17 mei 17.30 uur > page 25

>>

KINDOo-oops! He’s about to fall out of the tree. H-h-h-hi. A little boy with thick glasses and a plaster on his eye. Can I s-s-s-sstalk prey with you? Was I stalking prey?Kind of. Oh. What are you doing in that tree? T-top sec-cret. He looks determined as he says it. Oh. I’ve got a hut. Do you want to c-c-c-come in? I don’t know what I want. What-t-t-t’s wrong. Wassamatter?? He’s leans his head to one side. I feel like... I feel like a failure. F-f-failure? Why? Everything’s going wrong. Ah, yes, he nods wisely. I g-g-g-get that, too. I keep b-b-b-b- Bumping into things? He nods and points to his eye. P-p-plaster. He strolls over to the tree. Are you c-c-coming? We’ll listen to some mu-mu-s-sic. So I climb after him. He’s nailed two planks together. It wobbles, but he fits onto it perfectly. I look for a good branch. W-wait. I’ve g-g-got an i-P-P-Pod. He searches his pocket and all sorts of things come out. Pebbles, nails, bottle tops, shells, sweets. But no iPod. O-O-Oh g-g-golly. I p-p-put in my p-p-p-pocket. O-O-Oh g-g-golly. He carried on frantically searching. Handfuls of earth follow, and Lego bricks. Yes! He fishes the iPod from his pocket. Covered in earth. O-O-Oh g-g-golly there’s sand in it. O-O-Oh g-g-golly. Can I help you? What music do you want? He looks at me gratefully with his good eye. B-B-B-Beethoven. Why should I hear that? Be-c-c-c-cause you need to listen t-to your s-s-self the way you listen to m-music. “Listen to yourself.” That’s what the Grey Warrior said. I look at him, surprised. He looks back with his good eye. Blue eyes. He looks like me when I was smaller.

Play detailsAudience age: 8+Cast: 1

Other plays by this authorInside OutAudience age: 4+Cast: 2Available language(s): Dutch ASO (ASBO)Audience age: 10+Cast: 5 Available language(s): Dutch

JudoAudience age: 8+Cast: 5 (4 children, 1 adult actor) Available language(s): Dutch

Want zwart is geen kleur (Black Ain’t No Colour)Audience age: 8+Cast: 2 Available language(s): Dutch

Contact www.malouderoyvanzuydewijn.nl [email protected] +31 (0) 6 410 30 246

Page 26: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

> page 26 Dutch participant in the European Writers Lab 2014-2015

CLOVER 9 Bea and Jonathan are hand in glove. One day they will marry, their father is sure. Then the day comes when they go to secondary school for the first time. Skittish as rabbits, they scan the class looking for people they might talk with. Clover smiles back – nonchalant Clover, whose class presentation was about the apocalypse. Her father lives on another planet with a robot dog and more than a hundred telescopes in his back garden, all pointed towards planet Earth. Her mother is a nurse. Worldly-wise Clover thinks Bea and Jonathan are sweet. One by one she wraps them around her little finger. She is Jonathan’s first love; she is Bea’s big sister with whom she can talk about her dead mother. They steal together, smoke together, and promise they will never be one of the Normals. Slowly, she drives them apart until she has Bea all to herself. Clover pushes at the boundaries until Bea will do whatever she wants. But then one day, deep in the night, she meets her mother who smells of wine and Clover cuts off Bea’s pigtail. It makes Bea sick. Fortunately, Jonathan likes her short hair. When Bea returns to school, Clover has a new best girlfriend. But Bea will never cry so easily again.

Jorieke Abbing Jorieke Abbing (1983) completed her Writing for

Performance studies at Utrecht School of the Arts in 2007. Her graduation piece “Beste Sneeuw” won the three-yearly Van der Vies award for Best Dutch Play in 2008 and the international Kaas & Kappes award

in 2009.

Jorieke’s has had work commissioned by NT Jong, Het Filiaal, Toneelgroep Oostpool, Tuning

People, Jeugdtheater Hofplein and Filmmuseum Amsterdam. At Toneelmakerij she worked together with director Roeland Hofman on two productions

with TM Jong, the company’s youth theatre ensemble. Jorieke has also collaborated with her

sister on two productions: “Aan die komen” and “Hier komt de nacht”, based on true stories about

Groningen during the Second World War.

Page 27: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

Toneelmakerij zaaldo 16 mei, vrij 17 mei 17.30 uur > page 27

>>

CLOVERWhat a couple of sweeties you are.You don’t mind if I sit here do you? JONATHANDon’t mind at all. CLOVER (to Bea)You especially, you’re a supersweetie. JONATHANCorrect. Bea’s a supersweetie. CLOVERBea. Kiss me. BEAWhy? CLOVERGirlfriends kiss each other hello. On the mouth. Didn’t you know that? JONATHANI knew. BEAI don’t know if I want to. JONATHANJust do it.

(Translation: Rina Vergano)

Play details Audience age: 9+Cast: 3 (2 girls, 1 boy) Available language(s): Dutch, EnglishAdditional information: inspired by Tomek Tryzna’s book “Meisje Niemand”

Other plays by this authorBeste Sneeuw (Dear Snow)Age: 8+ Cast: 3 (1 man, 1 woman, 1 girl)Available language(s): Dutch, English

Jagtlust SmaglustAge: 14+Cast: 15 Available language(s): DutchAdditional information: based on the book “Jagtlust” by Annejet van der Zijl

Halve Mens (Half-Human)Age: 14+Cast: 3Available language(s): Dutch

Trollenjong (Troll Child)Audience age: 4+Cast: 2Available language(s): Dutch

Verona aan de Rijn (Verona on the Rijn)Audience age: 14+Cast: 50Available language(s): Dutch

Lucy Loves Ringo StarrAudience age: 8+Cast: 2Available language(s): Dutch

Het Meisje en de Engel (The Girl and the Angel)Audience age: 6+Cast: 2Available language(s): Dutch

[email protected]

Page 28: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

> page 28

Kristofer GrønskagKristofer Grønskag (1984) has written or adapted more than twenty

plays, both for children and adults. His work has been translated into several languages and produced in Norway, the Netherlands, Denmark,

Sweden and Bosnia. Several of his plays have received nominations and awards, including “The Beloved”, which won the 2012 Amsterdam

Fringe Bronze Award. Other plays include “Kinder K”, “Democritic”, “Sub Text”, “We Who Hate Us”, “The Boy”, “And

Everything Shall Disappear” and “Hubris”. He currently has a two-year residency at Dramatikkens Hus, Oslo’s national institute for

theatre play development. Kristofer Grønskag’s work often deals with demanding themes, and he always approaches them with playfulness

and curiosity.

SATELLITES IN THE NIGHT SKY 8Joni has discovered something new in this vast Universe. It is a black hole – a black hole that has the power to devour every little thing that comes too close. And the hole is in her stomach. Joni sets out on a voyage into the strange Universe in which we live. She visits the 44 elephants hiding on the moon. She listens to the words that live in porcelain plates smashing on the floor. She sets her younger brother on fire… unintentionally, of course. She tries to make sense of her mum, that great big crying crocodile. She talks to all the dead animals sent out to orbit the Earth like an ever-revolving piece of celestial jewellery. And when she gets really angry she swallows the entire Universe. She sings songs – songs in her own language, a language so different from all other languages that it sounds almost scary.

“Satellites in the Night Sky” might be a play about really using our eyes. Maybe it’s about really using our ears. Or perhaps it’s about really, really using that organ in which our imagination resides.

photo > Andrea Haugerud Hovik

Norwegian participant in the European Writers Lab 2014-2015

Page 29: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

Toneelmakerij zaaldo 16 mei, vrij 17 mei 17.30 uur > page 29

>>

JONIIn my belly lives my little brother, riding a homemade rocket.

MY LITTLE BROTHERAll systems up and running!

JONIWhere are we going?

MY LITTLE BROTHERUp, up and away!

JONIAnd why are you going up, up and away?

MY BABY BROTHERWe are going to find something that can seal the hole in your stomach.

JONIYes! Are you ready?!

MY BABY BROTHERBut why?

JONIBecause ”it can’t go on like this.”

MY LITTLE BROTHERLike what?

JONII’ll show you.109876543210I ignite the gazoline.But the rocket does not burst into flames across the night sky above us.It just bursts into flames. With a greatwoof!

MY LITTLE BROTHERWoof!

JONIAnd the same thing happens to my little brothers clothes.His trousers, his jumper, his eyebrows, the hair on his head, it all burns up.

Only his shirt collar remains fuming around his neck.He looks like a naked priestand he shouts

MY LITTLE BROTHERWow!

JONIand I shoutDouble-wow!And we can hear our mother and father shouting from downstairs

MY MOTHER AND MY FATHERJONI!!!

MY LITTLE BROTHERDid I go up, up and away?

JONINot quite.

MY LITTLE BROTHERMaybe we didn’t use enough gazoline?

JONIMaybe we used too much gazoline?And up in the attic there are two mouths laughing.The sound of light.Like a star.And then the door swings open.

MY FATHERJoni!What are you doing?

JONINothing.

MY FATHERIt can’t go on like this.

MY MOTHERNo,it can’t go on like this.

JONIThe star is gone.The black hole in my stomach has devoured it.All that’s left is the smell of smoke and burnt hair.

(Translator: Neal Howard)

Page 30: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

> page 30

Play detailsAudience age: 8+Cast: 4 (minimum, up to as many as wanted)Available language(s): Norwegian, English

Other plays by this authorMustasjemysteriet (The Moustache Mysteries)Audience age: 4+Cast: 3Available language(s): Norwegian, English

Og alt skal bli borte (And Everything Shall Disappear)Audience age: 8+Cast: 3Available language(s): Norwegian, English

Gutten (The Boy)Audience age: 14+Cast: 4 (minimum)Available language(s): Norwegian, English

Demokratikk (Democritic)Audience age: 14+Cast: 2Available language(s): Norwegian, English

Rami og Yuli (Rami and Yuli)Audience age: 7+Cast: 2 (2 actors, several puppets)Available language(s): Norwegian, English Additional information: Adaptation for puppet theatre of Shakespeare’s “Romeo and Juliet”

Contactkristofergronskag.wordpress.comkristofer.gronskag@gmail.com +47 90 14 05 27

Norwegian participant in the European Writers Lab 2014-2015

Page 31: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

Toneelmakerij zaaldo 16 mei, vrij 17 mei 17.30 uur > page 31

>>

Page 32: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

> page 32

Jakob Nolte and Michel DecarMichel Decar and Jakob Nolte were born in West Germany in the late 1980s. The plays

they wrote alone or as a duo have been produced in numerous theatres in Germany, Austria and Switzerland and have been invited to several festivals. In 2013 they've won the Brüder-Grimm-Preis des Landes Berlin for Das Tierreich. Jakob recently published

his first novel, while Michel directed two radioplays for Deutschlandradiokultur.

HELLFIRE AFTERNOONS e Hellfire Afternoons is a play about the global menace of drone strikes and the special role that Western society plays in them. In short scenes set all over the world we see all sorts of people wrestling with their problems and being confronted with this new kind of warfare. 

German participants in the European Writers Lab 2014-2015

Page 33: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

Toneelmakerij zaaldo 16 mei, vrij 17 mei 17.30 uur > page 33

>>

The KH-12 Crystal satellite emerges from the depths of space, breaks through the border of the Southern Hemisphere and speeds across the equator. North America is visible below, and its high-resolution cameras glide over the Caribbean Sea, the jungles of the Andes and then… a city – a metropolis, a mega-city. The satellite’s lens focuses sharply on the outskirts of Bogotá: its factories, shopping malls and highways. The airport, El Dorado, is surrounded by terraced houses and barracks. The cameras scan in closer and follow a vehicle. A bus is making its way from the centre of the western suburbs. Drizzle beats against the windows.

GABO CORREAIs this seat free? CARLA RIVERAAre you blind? GABO CORREAYou’re Carla, right? CARLA RIVERANone of your business. GABO CORREA Okay. [Short pause] CARLA RIVERALook, I don’t know who you are, and I’ve never noticed you or anything. GABO CORREA I’m Gabriel Sergio Correa. But my friends call me Gabo. CARLA RIVERAThe Gabo? GABO CORREAProbably.  CARLA RIVERASo? Like I care.  GABO CORREA Great. So how are you doing? CARLA RIVERAFantastic. Was in the Andes yesterday. It was amazing. 

GABO CORREAIn the National Park? Aren’t there llamas? And gazelles? CARLA RIVERA And elephants! But only African elephants, not Indian.  GABO CORREAI think I even saw a Lynx there, once. CARLA RIVERA Yeah, there are pumas. And Polish and White-Russian Lynx.  GABO CORREA You mean, lynxes. CARLA RIVERA No, lynx.... Definitely lynx. 

Play detailsAudience age: 16+Cast: 6 (actors)Available language(s): English, German

Other plays by this authorDas Tierreich (Animal Kingdom)Audience age: 14+Cast: Unspecified (21 characters played by optional numbers of actors)Available language(s): German

ContactRowohlt Theaterverlag: [email protected]

Page 34: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

> page 34

Glenn WaldronGlenn's first full-length play “Forever House” was

produced in March/April 2013 at the Drum Theatre, Plymouth, directed by Joe Murphy.

Glenn (1977) is currently under commission to Company of Angels/Bush Theatre and the Theatre

Royal Plymouth. Other theatre credits include “Plucky” (Bush/DryWrite) and “Come to Where I’m From” (Paines Plough). Glenn was editor of

influential style magazine i-D from 2004 to 2006. Since then he has written features for a broad

range of publications including Vogue, the New York Times, W Magazine, Wallpaper, The Guardian and The Independent. He also lectures at the London College

of Fashion.

NATIVES c “There is a world out there, so new, so random and disassociated that it is both thrilling and entirely overwhelming. We mistake almost anything for a relationship, a community of sorts, and yet, when we are with our families, in our communities, we are clueless, we short-circuit and immediately dive back into the digitized version – it is easier, because we can both be our truer selves and our fantasy selves all at once, with each carrying equal weight.”AM Homes What’s it like to be a 14-year-old growing up with this ‘random and disassociated’ world as a given? What happens when you grow up with seemingly everything and nothing within your grasp? Focusing on the generation of so-called ‘digital natives’, the play looks at what it means when 14-year-olds are no longer ‘just schoolkids’ but active participants in a global media community – with all the incredible promise, power, subtle threats and fierce insecurities that this entails.

UK participant in the European Writers Lab 2014-2015

Page 35: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

Toneelmakerij zaaldo 16 mei, vrij 17 mei 17.30 uur > page 35

>>

“Because, I mean, it’s not like I’m gonna do it. I mean, I’m not really gonna do it. Even though I’ve sent her 23 texts and she’s ignored every single one. Even though I’ve sort-of said I’m sorry. Even though today is my birthday and, I mean, whatever, just get over it, y’know? But I’m not really gonna share it. Even though I could. I just could.”

And I look at her and she’s looking at me and suddenly it’s just….Oh, fuck.There’s this, this rush of….It is not a feeling I have had before. It is so big and complete and…. Not to be gay but it makes me go weak at the knees. It really does!And suddenly it’s like, ‘Arrgh!’ Yes! And I feel completely stupid. I feel like the biggest twat.Because she is beautiful, she is really beautiful. She’s the most beautiful girl in this town. Possibly the universe. She is Rihanna, Lauren Cockcroft from Year Ten, and all my favourite video girls melted down and made into one perfect being and why did I never see this before? And I’m smiling this smile, this smile I’ve never smiled before, and she’s doing the same. Which is how I know. Know it’s not just something in my head, know it’s something real.And I want to kiss her, I really do. But I don’t think I can move. There’s approximately twenty-five centimetres between her mouth and mine but it might as well be the length of the Eiffel Tower for all I can do about it.And then she’s saying, ‘Go on then. Go on, knobhead.’And I don’t know whether it’s me or her that reaches out but suddenly we’re kissing. We’re kissing and it is God’s-honest the most brilliant moment of my life. It’s this pure, golden moment, do you know what I mean?Have you ever felt like that? Have you?

Play detailsAudience age: 14+/15+ Cast: 3Available languages: English

[email protected]

Page 36: Words to live in - a new generation of Dutch playwrights for young people - De Toneelmakerij

> page 36

Concept and selection Liesbeth Coltof, Paulien GeerlingsTextsSusanne Visser, Annemarie WenzelTranslator and English copy editor Steve GreenDesignEsther de Boer - Es & ZnEditingNeeltje van Balkom, Elselien Leemhuis, Susanne Visser

www.toneelmakerij.nl >>

Published as part of Theatre Café Festival

Amsterdam 2015

All the theatre texts contained in this publication are intended for young audiences.