
MykolaÌýKulish’s playÌý²Ñ²¹°ì±ô±ð²Ô²¹Ìý³Ò°ù²¹²õ²¹Ìýis the story of a thirteen year-old girl whoÌýdreams of life in the Soviet Union and struggles to distinguishÌýreality from fantasy.ÌýIn September 1933, under the direction ofÌýLesÌýKurbas,Ìýit was performed at gunpoint before a crowd of GPU agents, the Repertoire Committee and Politburo of Soviet Ukraine. The play was subsequently banned; Kulish was later declared a ‘bourgeois-nationalist' playwright and, like Kurbas, executed by the Soviet regimeÌýin 1937.
In 2017, Maria Montague, the ÃÜÌÒÊÓÆµ University Amateur Dramatic Club and ÃÜÌÒÊÓÆµ Ukrainian Studies are bringing the play to life in its first-ever English-language production.
It is the second theatrical collaboration between ÃÜÌÒÊÓÆµ Ukrainian Studies and Montague, who is an alumna of the Ukrainian Studies undergraduate programme and a current MPhil candidate at ÃÜÌÒÊÓÆµ researching Kurbas'sÌýpractice of peretvorennia or 'transformation'. Her verbatim play on the war in Donbas -- The Summer Before Everything,Ìýco-authored with ÃÜÌÒÊÓÆµ's Bohdan Tokarskyi --Ìýpremiered at the Junction in ÃÜÌÒÊÓÆµ and toured the United Kingdom in 2016.
'I am so excited to be working with ÃÜÌÒÊÓÆµ Ukrainian StudiesÌýto bring the first English translation of MaklenaÌýto the stage', said Montague. She credits Marta Jenkala, ÃÜÌÒÊÓÆµ's Lector in Ukrainian, for her steadfast support in navigating the complexities of the Ukrainian text.
Montague's production ofÌý²Ñ²¹°ì±ô±ð²Ô²¹ÌýbeginsÌýwith a sneak preview on 11 June in ÃÜÌÒÊÓÆµ, where actors will perform a rehearsed reading of the play at the ADC Theatre. It will then travel to the Edinburgh Fringe Festival for a run in the summer.Ìý'All the profits from the rehearsed reading in ÃÜÌÒÊÓÆµ will go toward helping our company with living costs at the Fringe', noted Montague.
'Since its launch in 2008, ÃÜÌÒÊÓÆµ Ukrainian Studies has sought to advance knowledge of Ukraine through innovative teaching, research and public outreach', said Dr Rory Finnin, Director of the ÃÜÌÒÊÓÆµ Ukrainian Studies programme and Head of the Department of Slavonic Studies at the ÃÜÌÒÊÓÆµ.Ìý'Maria Montague's production ofÌý²Ñ²¹°ì±ô±ð²Ô²¹Ìýis a striking exampleÌýof what can happen when talented and engaged undergraduates in Ukrainian Studies pursue their academic interest in Ukraine at postgraduate level and channel it into new directions. Now English-language audiences will encounter the work of Mykola Kulish, Ukraine's greatest twentieth-century playwright,Ìýfrom a fresh perspective. We cannot wait to see what happens next.'