Gloria Brillowska
Gloria Brillowska (*1986 in Hamburg) studierte Modedesign an der HAW Hamburg.
Seit 2013 arbeitet sie als freie Kostümbildnerin mit verschiedenen Regisseur*innen und Choreograf*innen, u.a. Schorsch Kamerun, Jenny Beyer, Evy Schubert, JAJAJA, Kyung-Sung Lee. Ihre Projekte führten sie u.a. ans Schauspielhaus Hamburg, Staatstheater Stuttgart, Residenztheater München, Staatsoper Stuttgart, Theater Basel, Ruhrtriennale, Volksbühne Berlin, Hebbel am Ufer, Theater Bremen, Kampnagel Hamburg, Elbphilharmonie und Ballhaus Ost.
Sie kreiert Kostüme für Bühne und Film/Musikvideos u.a. für Deichkind, Die Goldenen Zitronen, Sophia Kennedy, Odd Couple, Stereo Total, Felix Kubin, Erobique.
Productions
At Whitsun the lion king Nobel invites his subjects to his court for an early summer celebration. The entire animal kingdom gathers – ranging from the crane to the wolf and the bear. Only one animal is missing: the fox called Reineke. As soon as his name his mentioned, the mood of harmony vanishes. One angry accusation follows another and Reinike the fox is charged in his absence with a series of incredible crimes. The cockerel, for example, complains of losing his wife and children – Reineke ate them for supper. When he is eventually put on trial, the accomplished liar – an animal equivalent of Ibsen’s Peer Gynt – manages to pull the wool over everyone’s eyes – man, woman or creature – and slip his neck out of the noose. Eventually he even acquires a whole crowd of followers and is elected Chancellor.
The moral of the story is that not everyone with foxy cunning and a talent for oratory puts those gifts to benevolent use – on the contrary! But how can we tell the difference between truth and lies? How can we avoid being taken in by the peddlers of fake news? How can we remain faithful to our own opinions and values?
Reineke FuchsWhat do we need to make theatre? Does theatre have a tangible impact on our lives?
Based on a reading of Bertolt Brecht's 77-part «A Short Organum for the Theatre», the South Korean director Kyung-Sung Lee and the ensemble of the Residenztheater explore the current crises in Korea, Germany and the world, playfully testing whether Brecht could still help us to understand the world better today.
77 Versuche, die Welt zu verstehen (77 attempts to understand the world)