The period from 1989 to 2024 is a time of dynamic changes. These affect not only the substance of the theatre but also the conventions of photography and the technical revolution, which has led to an explosion of colours, photographic styles, and a diversification of the media that carry the memory of the theatre.
At the turn of the century, the theatre underwent a radical metamorphosis. A new trend emerged that put the audience at the centre. Theatre became socially engaged, bringing taboo subjects to the stage and revealing what had previously been hidden from sight. Today, issues such as gender, sexuality, racism, and otherness are openly discussed. As well as illness, violence and religion. Theatres open their stages to people with disabilities, sexual and racial minorities, and their representatives. The people who speak for these groups may not be professionals, but authenticity speaks in their defence. In this way, the boundary between the created and the private and authentic is blurred, and participatory theatre representing the excluded emerges.
High-tech and multimedia enter the scene: micro ports, projections, screens, cameras and VR. Pop culture is expanding. Theatre mixes with other media such as film, video art, performance, dance, and music videos. Carefully designed costumes are increasingly replaced by everyday clothes from chain stores or second-hand shops. Sets are often created by visual artists, and they resemble installations from contemporary art galleries or, conversely, are replaced by austere interiors of halls, back rooms, basements and corridors. The acting also changes. It is infused with performative elements, dance, and improvisation. The language becomes more colloquial, sometimes vulgar.
At the same time, a technological revolution in photography took place. Colour photography, which initially seemed to reflect reality more faithfully, became widely available. The first experiments were imperfect, and the quality of the results deteriorated. The films were not sensitive enough, resulting in blurred, grainy images with poor white balance. The discoloured images lack detail in the shadows and lose the nobility of their black-and-white predecessors. This applies to both photography and video.
Fragment filmu dokumentalnego „Stary”, 73 minuty
Scenariusz i reżyseria: Magdalena Hueckel, Tomasz Śliwiński
Zdjęcia: Marek Gajczak
Scenografia: Magdalena Hueckel
Dźwięk: Michał Korzeniowski
Montaż: Aleksandra Idzikowska, Tomasz Śliwiński
Kierownictwo produkcji: Katarzyna Kuca
Producent: Waldemar Raźniak, Aneta Zagórska
Produkcja wykonawcza: Krakow Film Klaster
Produkcja: Narodowy Stary Teatr im. Heleny Modrzejewskiej w Krakowie
Reżyseria: Martyna Peszko
Zdjęcia: Magdalena Mosiewicz
Produkcja: Fundacja TEATR 21
Koprodukcja: Mazowiecki Instytut Kultury, Warszawski Fundusz Filmowy