A Good Night Out’: When Political Theatre Aims at Being Popular, Or How Norwegian Political Theatre in the 1970s Utilized Populist Ideals and Popular Culture in Their Performances

Bertolt Brecht stated in Schriften zum Theater: Über eine Nichtaristotelische Dramatik (Writings on Theatre: On Anti-Aristotelian Drama) that a high quality didactic (and politi­cal) theatre should be an entertaining theatre. The Norwegian theatre company Håloga­land Teater used Brecht’s statement a...

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Published in:Nordic Theatre Studies
Main Author: Watson, Anna Blekastad
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Association of Nordic Theatre Scholars 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1956/19289
https://doi.org/10.7146/nts.v29i2.104615
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author Watson, Anna Blekastad
author_facet Watson, Anna Blekastad
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description Bertolt Brecht stated in Schriften zum Theater: Über eine Nichtaristotelische Dramatik (Writings on Theatre: On Anti-Aristotelian Drama) that a high quality didactic (and politi­cal) theatre should be an entertaining theatre. The Norwegian theatre company Håloga­land Teater used Brecht’s statement as their leading motive when creating their political performances together with the communities in Northern Norway. The Oslo-based theatre group, Tramteatret, on the other hand, synthesised their political mes­sages with the revue format, and by such attempted to make a contemporaneous red revue inspired by Norwegian Workers’ Theatre (Tramgjengere) in the 1930s. Håloga­land Teater and Tramteatret termed themselves as both ‘popular’ and ‘political’, but what was the reasoning behind their aesthetic choices? In this article I will look closer at Hålogaland Teater’s folk comedy, Det er her æ høre tel (This is where I belong) from 1973, together with Tramteatret’s performance, Deep Sea Thriller, to compare how they utilized ideas of socialist populism, popular culture, and folk in their productions. When looking into the polemics around political aesthetics in the late 1960s and the 1970s, especially lead by the Frankfurter School, there is a distinct criticism of popular culture. How did the theatre group’s definitions of popular culture correspond with the Frankfurter School’s criticism? publishedVersion
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Hålogaland
Northern Norway
genre_facet Hålogaland
Northern Norway
geographic Hålogaland Teater
Norway
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Norway
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spelling ftunivbergen:oai:bora.uib.no:1956/19289 2025-01-16T22:16:41+00:00 A Good Night Out’: When Political Theatre Aims at Being Popular, Or How Norwegian Political Theatre in the 1970s Utilized Populist Ideals and Popular Culture in Their Performances Watson, Anna Blekastad 2018-03-14T14:01:00Z application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/1956/19289 https://doi.org/10.7146/nts.v29i2.104615 eng eng Association of Nordic Theatre Scholars urn:issn:2002-3898 urn:issn:0904-6380 https://hdl.handle.net/1956/19289 https://doi.org/10.7146/nts.v29i2.104615 cristin:1572850 Copyright 2018 the author(s) and journal Nordic Theatre Journal Political Theatre Popular Culture & Theatre Adorno Gramsci Brecht Dario Fo Tramteatret Hålogaland Teater Peer reviewed Journal article 2018 ftunivbergen https://doi.org/10.7146/nts.v29i2.104615 2023-03-14T17:41:56Z Bertolt Brecht stated in Schriften zum Theater: Über eine Nichtaristotelische Dramatik (Writings on Theatre: On Anti-Aristotelian Drama) that a high quality didactic (and politi­cal) theatre should be an entertaining theatre. The Norwegian theatre company Håloga­land Teater used Brecht’s statement as their leading motive when creating their political performances together with the communities in Northern Norway. The Oslo-based theatre group, Tramteatret, on the other hand, synthesised their political mes­sages with the revue format, and by such attempted to make a contemporaneous red revue inspired by Norwegian Workers’ Theatre (Tramgjengere) in the 1930s. Håloga­land Teater and Tramteatret termed themselves as both ‘popular’ and ‘political’, but what was the reasoning behind their aesthetic choices? In this article I will look closer at Hålogaland Teater’s folk comedy, Det er her æ høre tel (This is where I belong) from 1973, together with Tramteatret’s performance, Deep Sea Thriller, to compare how they utilized ideas of socialist populism, popular culture, and folk in their productions. When looking into the polemics around political aesthetics in the late 1960s and the 1970s, especially lead by the Frankfurter School, there is a distinct criticism of popular culture. How did the theatre group’s definitions of popular culture correspond with the Frankfurter School’s criticism? publishedVersion Article in Journal/Newspaper Hålogaland Northern Norway University of Bergen: Bergen Open Research Archive (BORA-UiB) Hålogaland Teater ENVELOPE(18.945,18.945,69.642,69.642) Norway Nordic Theatre Studies 29 2 87 119
spellingShingle Political Theatre
Popular Culture & Theatre
Adorno
Gramsci
Brecht
Dario Fo
Tramteatret
Hålogaland Teater
Watson, Anna Blekastad
A Good Night Out’: When Political Theatre Aims at Being Popular, Or How Norwegian Political Theatre in the 1970s Utilized Populist Ideals and Popular Culture in Their Performances
title A Good Night Out’: When Political Theatre Aims at Being Popular, Or How Norwegian Political Theatre in the 1970s Utilized Populist Ideals and Popular Culture in Their Performances
title_full A Good Night Out’: When Political Theatre Aims at Being Popular, Or How Norwegian Political Theatre in the 1970s Utilized Populist Ideals and Popular Culture in Their Performances
title_fullStr A Good Night Out’: When Political Theatre Aims at Being Popular, Or How Norwegian Political Theatre in the 1970s Utilized Populist Ideals and Popular Culture in Their Performances
title_full_unstemmed A Good Night Out’: When Political Theatre Aims at Being Popular, Or How Norwegian Political Theatre in the 1970s Utilized Populist Ideals and Popular Culture in Their Performances
title_short A Good Night Out’: When Political Theatre Aims at Being Popular, Or How Norwegian Political Theatre in the 1970s Utilized Populist Ideals and Popular Culture in Their Performances
title_sort good night out’: when political theatre aims at being popular, or how norwegian political theatre in the 1970s utilized populist ideals and popular culture in their performances
topic Political Theatre
Popular Culture & Theatre
Adorno
Gramsci
Brecht
Dario Fo
Tramteatret
Hålogaland Teater
topic_facet Political Theatre
Popular Culture & Theatre
Adorno
Gramsci
Brecht
Dario Fo
Tramteatret
Hålogaland Teater
url https://hdl.handle.net/1956/19289
https://doi.org/10.7146/nts.v29i2.104615