Symphonies / Turpitude
Drama

105 minutes

Symphonies / Turpitude

Eurokaz in collaboration with the Serbian National Council and the Croatian Engineering Association.

The program was implemented in collaboration with the Department of Culture of the Serbian National Council, with the support of the Office for Human Rights and Rights of National Minorities of the Government of the Republic of Croatia, and with the support of the City Office for Culture and Civil Society, the Ministry of Culture and Media, and the Kultura nova Foundation.

Symphonies / Turpitude

The dramaturgical structure of the play Symphonies / Turpitude is formed through a somewhat careless selection and accumulation of vitalistic material, primarily from Miroslav Krleža's collection of poems Symphonies from 1933, highlighting the poem Pan. As a counterpoint to Krleža's cultivated orgy, there is a selection and accumulation of the poetically abrupt automatism of the surrealist poem Turpitude by Marko Ristić.
Particular emphasis is given to Ristić's diary, written from May 27 to June 12, 1938, during the Turpitude printing period in Zagreb. It is a diary of impulsive hedonism and fascination with socializing with Krleža and his friends.
The characters in the play, with the looming stone of a global catastrophe behind their navels, spend time in cafes and restaurants, sing and joke late at night, vacation together, and play tennis, all within the bounds of bourgeois presence.
The cast includes all those who dominate Krleža's and Ristić's diaries and letters: Miroslav and Bela Krleža, Marko and Ševa Ristić, August Cesarec, his wife Marija Vinski, and the "most tragic figure of that time," Zvonko Richtmann.
Amidst cheerful and intellectually charged gatherings, mundane complications such as financial worries, debts for heating, and vacation troubles, the play leads us towards the greatest tragedy, the summer of 1941 when liberal and party communists were simultaneously executed in the Kerestinec camp: "Trotskyists" and Stalinists, including Cesarec, Richtmann, and Prica. A month later, Marija Vinski met the same fate.
The question posed by Stanko Lasić to all opponents of the ad limina apostolorum conflict on the literary left and the edge of intellectual cynicism, which Krleža and Ristić managed to postpone, is: Did they extend a hand to each other in parting?

Direction and dramatization

Rajna Racz

Composer

Marin Živković

Stage Movement

Kasija Vrbanac Strelkin

Set 

Tihomir Milovac

Costume 

Matija Dijanović MJ

Lighting

Tomislav Maglečić

Technical Support Associate

Ivan Sirotić Grof

Photography

Sandro Lendler

Production and Graphic Design

Marko Milovac

Pan

Fabijan Komljenović

Miroslav Krleža

Ivan Simon

Marko Ristić

Marko Kasalo

Bela Krleža

Zdenka Šustić

Ševa Ristić

Marina Žižić

Zvonimir Richtmann / Dog

Damian Humski

August Cesarec / Switchman

Lovro Rimac

Marija Vinski / Switchman's darling

Dora Čiča

keyboardist

Maro Morača

Class

Anja Dragić, Saša Jokić, Mateja Medaković, Sara Zrnić, Bojan Berić, Marko Franković, Martin Matošević (students of the Serbian Orthodox General Gymnasium "Kantakuzina Katarina Branković")