WE WERE A HANDFUL

WE WERE A HANDFUL

  • Genre Drama
  • Stage Drama Theatre
  • Premiere7. December 2024
  • Length3:30 hod.
  • Number of reprises23
  • Price 580 - 620 Kč

an idyllic comedy about the magic of childhood

“Our parents think that when I grow up I’m going to sit in an office all warm and cosy, that people will doff their hats to me and I’ll lick their stamps for them all day. And then I’ll send out for a hot dog. Well, I don’t like the sound of that. Most of all, I’d like to work at the Bejvals’ as a groom, ‘cos I’d get to wear a leather apron and I’d have a brass earring in my ear to ward off the evil eye...” Do you know who this is? Of course you do. This little wise guy is the shopkeeper’s son Petr Bajza, the hero of Karel Poláček’s last and most famous book. And just add the other “boys we hang out with” – Antonín Bejval, Éda Kemlink, Čeněk Jirsák and Zilvar from the workhouse – and that makes five of them. And they’re ready to get into fights with the boys from the neighbouring villages, to go on a secret visit to the local cinema, and to dream of a trip to distant India...

Karel Poláček created this idyllic picture of a boy’s life at a time when he was experiencing difficult personal moments during the Second World War. In the book, he returned to a small town similar to his native Rychnov nad Kněžnou at the turn of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, and again demonstrated his irresistible feeling for linguistic wit. His little narrator Bajza comments on the world around him and the humorous episodes in his surroundings with delightful precociousness and the unshakable logic of a child. We Were a Handful offers a charming return to the harmony of a carefree childhood, when the world still appears clear and well-ordered and every problem seems small and easy to solve.

This charming kaleidoscope of situations that repeat themselves from generation to generation and that we all know from our own childhood was staged for our theatre by director Mikoláš Tyc, one of its regular guests.

Author

Directed by

  • Mikoláš Tyc

Assistant director

Costumes

  • Marek Cpin

Dramaturgist

Stage

  • Marek Cpin

Music

Sound Direction

  • Tomáš Křižovič

Poster

  • Petr Hloušek, Tino Kratochvil

Light direction

  • Martin Seidl

Umělecký záznam a střih představení

  • Dalibor Černák

Pohybová spolupráce

  • Anna Korba Vanacká

Produkce

  • Zdeněk Helbich

Petr Bajza

Antonín Bejval

Éda Kemlink

Čeněk Jirsák

Zilvar z chudobince

Tatínek Bajza

Maminka Bajzová

Kristýna zvaná Rampepurda, jejich služka

Vařeková

Svoboda, cukrář

Svobodová, jeho žena

Evička, jejich dcera

Jakub, čeledín

Otakárek Soumarů

Slečna vychovatelka

Veselíková, učitelka

BLOG: Jaroslav Štěpaník’s Periodical (No. 94)

Jaroslav Štěpaník 15. December 2024 zdroj www.i-divadlo.cz/blogy

(…) Writer Jan Šotkovský and director Mikoláš Tyc set about adapting the book for the theatre together. They retained the main storyline, gave the script a bit of added pace and enriched it with some humorous twists with some clear and original writing. The dynamic conclusion with excellent musical numbers hits the spot and was extremely well received by the audience. The atmosphere of the time was enhanced by the use of colour in the set and the choice of costumes. The play has great pace and the individual scenes come thick and fast.

(…) The cast is well-chosen and well-matched, and they captured the characters and roles entrusted to them nicely without exception. We might give particular praise to the actors playing the young Bajza (Libor Matouš) and his female counterpart (Barbora Remišová). They get the biggest laughs in their small roles, while the audience will also certainly be happy to welcome experienced long-standing stars of the stage at Brno City Theatre – Zdena Herfortová, who gave a perfect and entertaining performance as the unbearable mother-in-law Vařeková, and Miloslav Čížek, who has already demonstrated his sense of comedy many years ago in operetta at the then State Theatre in Brno. He beautifully portrayed the rigorous protector of good morals and punisher of all injustices. We should also not neglect to mention Father Bajza as played by Michal Isteník. He suited the role well, played it with gusto, and added his own unique touch to it.

Thanks to everyone in the acting ensemble, the production team and the “invisible” people behind the scenes without whom nothing is possible, the New Year’s Eve production will bring wellbeing, entertainment and laughter. It may also evoke memories of your own childhood and prove a fitting commemoration of that warm-hearted writer of humorous novels Karel Poláček.

 

We Were a Handful: times when the world seemed simpler

Josef Meszáros 9. December 2024 zdroj www.scena.cz

The Drama Theatre at Brno City Theatre has received a visit from the five boys from Poláček’s cult novel WE WERE A HANDFUL, which has been adapted by Jan Šotkovský and Mikoláš Tyc, who also directed the production. This theatrical version, like Poláček’s literary work, offers the audience a nostalgic return to the idyllic world of childhood at the turn of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, when worries were small and life was still clear.

(…) Mikoláš Tyc’s direction focuses on the acting performances, devoting special attention to the adult actors in children’s roles. Their gestures, speech and movements are perfectly adapted to a child’s age, and this, along with the costumes evoking the period at which the novel was written, makes an authentic and playful effect.

Set designer Marek Cpin has created a set with a distinctive symbolism and a dreamlike quality. The dominant feature is the suspended circular roof of a merry-go-round surrounded by a stylised sky with white and purple clouds on a sky-blue background. The suspended clock on which time has come to a stop evokes a ritual in which the children jump up to touch it. This scene refers to a game with time, a metaphor for the merry-go-round of life and, above all, an idealised reflection of childhood that carries with it both hope and nostalgia. Poláček wrote his novel during World War II, shortly before his deportation to Terezín, which gives his rose-tinted perspective a specific meaning – as a means of escaping into the world of imagination and overcoming the hardships of a time when the future was uncertain. Cpin has also augmented this poetry with the stylisation of the costumes which evoke the 1940s. The costumes of the adventure novel heroes inspired by westerns and the circus are, in contrast, a playful parody.

Robin Schenk’s music also augments the atmosphere and is particularly exuberant during the scenes featuring the boys’ adventures.

(…) The acting is of a high standard, particularly in the performance of Libor Matouš as Petr Bajza, who not only advances the plot and introduces the audience to the individual episodes of the story, but also excels in moments of boyish dilemmas and adolescent embarrassment. Michal Isteník gives a believable portrayal of a loving but pragmatic businessman in the role of Bajza’s father, whose marital interactions with Evelína Studénková as Bajza’s mother add another comic dimension to the story. Zdena Herfortová, as Grandma Vařeková, convincingly conveys the small-town mentality, and her recycled clichés and nosiness seem both amusing and slightly unpleasant. Bajza’s group of friends, whose interactions lie at the heart of the story, also play an important role, particularly Jiří Daniel, Ondřej Halámek, Marek Hurák and Jakub Uličník. Each of the actors, from the main characters to the supporting characters, contributes to the variety and persuasiveness of the production.

The theatrical adaptation WE WERE A HANDFUL at Brno City Theatre celebrates the humour and linguistic richness of Poláček’s piece, while the precise work of the production team provides a vivid and touching reflection not only of childhood, but also of hope in difficult times. This production does not endeavour to be merely a nostalgic spectacle, but offers a deeper connection to human experience and universal themes of friendship, family and the search for harmony in difficult times. The viewer leaves not merely entertained, but also with a slight sadness for a time when the world seemed simpler and closer to the heart.

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