User:PfBird/Kristo Šagor

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Kristo Šagor (born March 16 1976 in Stadtoldendorf, Lower Saxony) is a German playwright and director. He has received numerous awards, and his plays Dreier ohne Simone, FSK 16 and Trüffelschweine are now among the most frequently performed plays in German-speaking countries.[1]

Career

Kristo Šagor was born on March 16, 1976 in Stadtoldendorf in the

Free University of Berlin.[2]

From 1996 to 1999, he was involved in the student theater TREKJOP, for which his play Dreier ohne Simone was created. Kristo Šagor directed the play himself in 1999 and played one of the three boys: Sven, Andreas and Kai are waiting to be interrogated in the principal's anteroom at their school, as they are all three suspected of having raped their classmate Simone on the school trip that has just ended. A petty war ensues based on insinuations, jealousy and desire. With Dreier ohne Simone, Kristo Šagor found his publisher, Kiepenheuer Bühnenvertriebs-GmbH, Berlin.[3] The play has been performed at numerous professional youth theaters, including abroad.

In 1999, Kristo Šagor studied for a year at

Schauspielhaus Bochum
.

In 2002, he made his debut as a director with a production of the same play at the

Schauspielhaus Bochum. From October 2008 to the end of February 2009, he lived on the stage of the Theater unter Tage and realized the project "Neue Heimat. Living underground".[6]

Kristo Šagor lives in Berlin.

Honouring

In 2001, Kristo Šagor received the audience award of the Heidelberger Stückemarkt and the Hallenser Dramatikerpreis for his play Unbeleckt, as well as the funds of the Friedrich-Schiller-Gedächtnispreis of the state of Baden-Württemberg. One year later, his play Federn lassen was rewarded with the prize of the Landesbühnengruppe of the Deutscher Bühnenverein. Moreover, his play Fremdeln was nominated for the German youth theatre prize the same year. Additionally, he received the second author prize at the fifth Dutch-German children’s and youth theater festival Kaas & Kappes in Duisburg in 2003, to be awarded with the author price for his play Trüffelschweine only two years later.

The same year, the Frankfurter Autorenstiftung honored his play Ja with the children’s theatre prize. The staging of his own play FSK 16 at Schnawwl, the youth theatre of Mannheim National Theatre was invited to the 8. German children’s and youth theatre meeting Augenblick mal in Berlin. In 2007, he staged the premiere of Genannt Gospodin from Philipp Löhle at the

Schauspielhaus Bochum. The same play was also staged at the theatre festival Mülheim
one year later.

In 2007, he won the German theatre prize Der Faust for his play Törless at the Deutsches Schauspielhaus in Hamburg in the category of the best direction of the children‘s and youth theatre. His play Patrick’s Trick was honored not only with the promotion prize of the children’s theatre of Berlin in 2013, but also with the youth theatre prize of Baden-Württemberg in 2014. That year, his play was nominated for the German Childrens Theatre Prize too. Only two years later, namely in 2016, the drama critics of the ZITTY of Berlin chose their favorite production, voting 2 Uhr 14, composed by David Paquet in the direction of Kristo Šagor from second place.

The play Ich liebe dich, produced for Ulrike Günther at the Schauburg in Munich, presented David Benito Garcia and Anne Bontemps in the main roles, resulting in Šagor being awarded with the Mülheimer KinderStückePreis by the Youth jury in 2019.[7][8]


Works

Staging

Important prizes

  • 2001: Audience Award of the Heidelberg Stückemarkt for Unbeleckt
  • 2003: Author's Prize for FSK 16 at the 5th Dutch-German Children's and Youth Theater Festival Kaas & Kappes in Duisburg
  • 2005: Author's Prize for Trüffelschweine at the 7th Dutch-German Children's and Youth Theater Festival Kaas & Kappes in Duisburg
  • 2008: Der Faust in the category best director children's and youth theater for Törleß at the Deutsches Schauspielhaus Hamburg
  • 2014: Baden-Württemberg Youth Theater Prize for Patrick's Trick
  • 2019: Mülheimer KinderStückePreis for Ich lieb dich

External Links

References

  1. ^ Kristo Šagor, Welt Online
  2. ^ Kristo Šagor.] Munzinger-Archiv GmbH, Ravensburg, retrieved April 8, 2021.
  3. ^ Kristo Šagor bei Kiepenheuer Medien, retrieved on May 7, 2019.
  4. ^ Kristo Šagor, Goethe Institut
  5. ^ Kristo Šagor, guest artist
  6. ^ Neue Heimat. Wohnen unter Tage
  7. ^ Mülheimer KinderStückePreis 2019 für Kristo Šagor, deutschlandfunkkultur.de, published and retrieved on May 17, 2019
  8. ^ Mülheim: Kristo Šagor gewinnt KinderStücke-Preis, nachtkritik.de from May 17, 2019, retrieved May 23, 2019


Category:Dramatists and playwrights Category:Writers from Berlin Category:1976 births Category:German male dramatists and playwrights Category:Living people