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Dušan David Pařízek

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Dušan David Pařízek

Dušan David Pařízek (10 August 1971) is a Czech theatre director, mostly working in German-speaking countries.[1]

Background

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Dušan Pařízek was born Brno, and his family later emigrated to Germany. He studied comparative literature and theatre science at Munich University and then directing and dramaturgy at the Theatre Faculty of the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague (DAMU). In 1997 he staged the play Die Präsidentinnen (The Women Presidents) by Werner Schwab and some of his additional plays in Theatre on the Balustrade.

In 1998 Dušan Pařízek was the founder and stage director of The Prague Chamber Theatre, until 2012. Pařízek's work there performed around the globe, and was selected as Czech Theatre of the Year many times.[2]

From 2002 Dušan Pařízek worked as an executive and art director of Divadlo Komedie, with a program under the strong influence of German-speaking theatre texts. In 2012 his creative team quit because of conflicts about the finances from the municipality of Prague.

Meanwhile, Pařízek directed productions in cities including Darmstadt, Cologne, Zürich, Düsseldorf, Bremen and Vienna. In 2013 he staged a version of The Garden Party by Václav Havel at the National Theatre in Prague.

In 2018 Dušan Pařízek directed the Exil Ensemble at the Deutsches Theater, Berlin. The material was an adaptation of Franz Kafka's unfinished novel The Man Who Disappeared, transformed into the play Amerika.[3]

Awards

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  • In 2015 he won the Inszenierung des Jahres (Production of the Year) award from Theater heute magazine for the best German-speaking production of the year with his production of Wolfram Lotz's Die lächerliche Finsternis (The Ridiculous Darkness) in Akademietheater, Vienna.[4]
  • 2018: Nestroy Theatre Prize for Best director for Vor Sonnenaufgang[5]

References

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  1. ^ Dušan David Pařízek, Berliner Ensemble (in German), retrieved 27 June 2024
  2. ^ Keynote: Dušan David Pařízek, Prague Quadrennial of Performance Design and Space, 10 June 2023, retrieved 27 June 2024
  3. ^ In Germany's Theaters, Stories of Exiles and Refugees, The New York Times, 4 January 2018, retrieved 27 June 2024
  4. ^ Becker, Tobias (27 August 2015). "Die Wiener Burg räumt ab". Der Spiegel (in German). Hamburg. Retrieved 13 October 2019.
  5. ^ Jarolin, Peter (17 November 2018). "Nestroy 2018: Schauspiel-Preise für Peters, Simonischek, Lyssewski". Kurier (in German). Vienna. Retrieved 12 October 2019.