Henrik Ibsen: An Enemy of the People
Translated by László Kúnos
Dr TOMAS STOCKMANN, medical officer | Ernő Fekete |
PETER STOCKMANN, his elder bother, the mayor of the town | János Kulka |
ASLAKSEN, publisher | János Bán |
HOVSTAD, editor of The Peoples' Messenger | András Ötvös |
BILLING, sub-editor of The Peoples' Messenger | Lehel Kovács |
KATRINE, Dr. Stockmann's wife | Judit Rezes |
PETRA, their daughter | Hanna Pálos |
HENRIK, their son | Bendegúz Bezerédi |
MORTEN KIIL, a tanner, Mrs. Stockmann's father | Dénes Ujlaki |
HORSTER, captain | Ferenc Lengyel |
CITIZENS | Erika Bodnár Zoltán Bezerédi Tamás Keresztes |
TV CAMERA OPERATOR | Kriszta Székely |
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Set design | Csörsz Khell |
Costumes | Györgyi Szakács |
Video | Vince Varga |
Music | László Sáry |
Dramaturg | Tamara Török |
Assistant | György Tiwald |
Directed by | Gábor ZSÁMBÉKI |
Dr Stockmann discovers, that the water of the baths, which revived the small town is polluted. The public, led by the mayor (who is the elder brother of the doctor) refuses to face the truth. The doctor not only has to face with the power of money and the corruption of the authorities, but the public slowly but surely turning against him.
Ibsen wrote An Enemy of the People based on a newspaper article in 1882, three years after A Doll’s House and one year after the Ghosts – actually as a response to the public outcry against the Ghosts. Dr Stockmann was partially based on himself: in 1948, at the outbreak of the First Schleswig War, the twenty-year old Ibsen enthusiastically agitated against the Germans. Realizing, that his compatriots were abandoning the Danes, he raised his voice even more intensively against their cowardice. The intense conflict between him and his environment led Ibsen to see everyone as an enemy of the people.
100 min, with no interval
Premiere: 27 April, 2013