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Barrie Kosky

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Name
  
Barrie Kosky

Role
  
Director


Movies
  
Opera Australia: Nabucco

Books
  
On Ecstasy



Education
  
Melbourne Grammar School, University of Melbourne

Barrie kosky in conversation with lyndon terracini brisbane festival


Barrie Kosky (born 18 February 1967) is an Australian theatre and opera director.

Contents

Barrie Kosky Barrie Kosky BarrieKosky Twitter

Opera award 2014 barrie kosky komische oper berlin


Biography

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Barrie Kosky was born in Melbourne, the grandson of Jewish emigrants from Europe. He attended Melbourne Grammar School where he performed in Brecht's play The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui in 1981, Shakespeare's "Othello" in 1982, and later directed his first play. Among many other later famous Australian artists, he also worked at the St Martins Youth Arts Centre. In 1985, he then began studies in Piano and Music History at the University of Melbourne.

Career

Barrie Kosky Kosky to head Berlin opera house Arts Entertainment

In 1989 Kosky directed the Australian premiere of Michael Tippett's The Knot Garden (reduced version) at the Melbourne Spoleto Festival. In 1990 he formed the Gilgul Theatre which staged The Exile Trilogy in 1993 (The Dybbuk, Es Brent, Levad) at the Belvoir St Theatre; Kosky was artistic director of the Gilgul Theatre until 1997. Other notable productions with the Gilgul Theatre were The Wilderness Room and a stage adaptation of The Operated Jew.

Barrie Kosky wwwlimelightmagazinecomausiteswwwlimelightma

For the Victorian State Opera he directed in 1991 The Marriage of Figaro and The Barber of Seville. In 1993 he directed the season premiere of Larry Sitsky's opera The Golem for Opera Australia which was also released on ABC Classics. Also in 1993 he directed Goethe's Faust I and II for the Melbourne Theatre Company, and Stravinsky's Oedipus Rex for Opera Queensland.

Barrie Kosky A daring and playful operatic work by worldrenowned former

In 1996 he directed Nabucco (recorded on DVD by ABC Television.) and The Flying Dutchman for Opera Australia, a work which he revisited in 2006 at the Aalto-Musiktheater in Essen, Germany. Also in 1996, Kosky was appointed director of the Adelaide Festival of Arts, at 29 years the youngest person ever appointed to that position. Following that appointment, the 50-minute documentary Kosky in Paradise examined his ideas and creative motivations.

Barrie Kosky Barrie Kosky Maxine Robertson Management Ltd

In 1997 he directed Molière's Tartuffe in Christopher Hampton's translation at the Sydney Theatre Company (STC). In 1998 he directed Mourning Becomes Electra for the STC, and King Lear for the Bell Shakespeare company's touring production. In 1999 Kosky directed Alban Berg's Wozzeck for the Sydney Opera House. In 2000, Kosky directed Ted Hughes' adaption of Seneca's Oedipus at the Sydney Theatre Company.

Barrie Kosky Barrie Kosky Komische Oper Berlin

From 2001 to 2005 Kosky was co-director of the Schauspielhaus Wien in Vienna. There he directed Euripides' Medea with the Australian actress Melita Jurisic; the production was nominated for the Nestroy-Theaterpreis (Nestroy Theatre Prize). He also directed there Poppea, in which he combined Monteverdi's music with songs by Cole Porter,The Tales of Hoffmann, Macbeth in an all-female version, and Boulevard Delirium with Paul Capsis which toured around the world for several seasons, including Australia where it won a 2006 Helpmann Award. His staging of Monteverdi's L'Orfeo at the Innsbrucker Festwochen für Alte Musik under the musical direction of René Jacobs was also shown at the Berlin Staatsoper Unter den Linden; that production was broadcast on German TV by RBB/arte. Also in 2005, Kosky directed Wagner's Lohengrin for the Vienna State Opera.

Barrie Kosky Barrie Kosky When I first saw The Magic Flute I didnt get it and

In 2006 he directed Tom Wright's eight-hour play The Lost Echo –based on Ovid's Metamorphoses and Euripides' The Bacchae– for the Actors Company at the STC; the play won five Helpmann Awards. In the same year, Kosky directed in Germany The Flying Dutchman at the Aalto-Musiktheater in Essen and Britten's Midsummer Night's Dream at the Theater Bremen.

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In 2007 Kosky presented his Vienna production of Monteverdi's L'incoronazione di Poppea at the 2007 Edinburgh Festival. In that year, he also directed Peter Grimes for the Staatsoper Hannover, and Tristan und Isolde for the Aalto-Musiktheater in Essen which received a nomination for the Faust Award.

Barrie Kosky Kosky in Conversation

In January 2008, he directed at the same house Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny. In April 2008 Kosky was participant in the "Towards a Creative Australia" stream at the Australia 2020 Summit. In July 2008 he directed the premiere of Liza Lim's opera The Navigator at the Judith Wright Centre of Contemporary Arts as part of the Brisbane Festival 2008, a work which Lim had developed during her stay in Berlin; Kosky had also directed her earlier opera The Oresteia (1993). The Navigator was also presented as part of the Melbourne International Arts Festival. In September 2008 Kosky directed Euripides' The Women of Troy with Melita Jurisic and Robyn Nevin in an adaptation by himself and Tom Wright at the Sydney Theatre Company. In August 2008 Melbourne University Publishing published an essay by Kosky, On Ecstasy (ISBN 978-0-522-85534-0). In October 2008, Kosky presented his stage adaption of the Edgar Allan Poe short story "The Tell-Tale Heart" at the Melbourne International Arts Festival. In 2009 Kosky directed Janáček's From the House of the Dead at the Staatsoper Hannover, a production that won the Faust Award. In the same year he started his Ring Cycle in Hannover, which was finished in June 2011. In 2010 he directed Richard Strauss' Die schweigsame Frau at the Opera festival of the Bavarian State Opera in Munich. Later in the same year he presented a double bill production of Purcell's Dido and Aeneas and Bartók's Bluebeard's Castle at the Oper Frankfurt.

Following several productions in the past at the Komische Oper Berlin, including Le Grand Macabre (2003), The Marriage of Figaro (2005), Gluck's Iphigénie en Tauride and Kiss Me, Kate (2007) (broadcast on German TV 3sat in 2008), Rigoletto (2009) and Rusalka (2011), Kosky has been appointed Chief Director at the Komische Oper commencing in the 2012/2013 season.

Kosky won the award for Best Director at the 2014 International Opera Awards.

In 2017, he made history when he became the first Jewish director at the Bayreuth Festival, when he directed there Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg.

Commenting on the leading positions held by Jews in the Berlin cultural institutions, Kosky, who depicts himself as a "gay Jewish kangaroo", said: "the more Jews the better in Berlin – bring it on! If you look at Berlin before the war, all the theatres were owned by Jews, it was like Broadway. They say that half the orchestras were full of Jewish musicians, all the major theatre directors were Jews."

Literature

  • Bauer, Jürgen (2008): No Escape. Aspekte des Jüdischen im Theater von Barrie Kosky. Edition Steinbauer, Wien. ISBN 978-3-902494-34-4 (in German)
  • Kosky, Barrie (2008): On Ecstasy. Melbourne University Publishing, Melbourne. ISBN 978-0-522-85534-0
  • References

    Barrie Kosky Wikipedia