Radia Show 402 | Hitler

RADIA

This week RADIA show is brought to us by RadioWORM and is produced by Nikolai Galen and Dolf Palnteijdt
Hitler is a radio play created by Nikolai Galen (voices) and Dolf Planteijdt (soundwork) at the WORM studio in Rotterdam 29.10-3.11.12 with additional work at the Koeienverhuur Mobile in Amsterdam. Based on a play text by Nikolai Galen.

Nikolai's production notes about the text:

"While choosing and writing the different texts which make up the text as a whole, I found myself attempting to grapple with some specific - and daunting -  themes. Namely:
_Anti-Semitism: What is it? Where does it spring from? How on Earth has it survived and festered for millennia? Why did it explode so pathologically in Hitler's thinking and Nazism in general. Presumably most of us (me included) sometimes have proto-racist feelings of discomfort in the presence of people (perhaps immigrants, perhaps those of a different class) who seem especially other to us, whose presence, whose cultural differences can irritate us, even though, at the same time, we might (I hope) be irritated with ourselves for being irritated, for carrying such sick prejudices. Yet it's an awfully, unimaginably, inconceivably long way from such feelings to genocide. Yet, there are plenty of populist politicians and their followers around, happy to play with racism in its various forms (they're taking our jobs, they're thieves and pimps, they're incompatible with our ways and beliefs, they're diluting the national spirit, they've no wish to integrate, etc...) fomented by nationalism, by myths of cultural difference and superiority, by a national claim for us versus them, and for this land being our land and all that. Bigotry is alive, well and kicking, as an uncountable and shameful number of contemporary murders and 'cleansings', especially in the world's numerous 'conflict zones', testify.

_Hitler's popularity in Germany: How on Earth could such a pathetic, mad and manically-deluded man be so popular, and for so long? I could ask the same question about, say, George W. Bush, yet Bush isn't mad, was Hitler mad? And what does it mean to say that he was evil? And given that he was evil (in a way Bush can't hold a candle to) - radically evil - then how come he was so popular, so adored...?

_How could 20th Century European culture, in the form of Nazism, be so unimaginably violent, even sadistic, even without any kind of rational justification, however feeble? Most obviously, there was no military reason for the death factories, nor the destruction of swathes of the Soviet Union after those regions had been conquered. It was as if the (German) nation (as imagined by itself) was infected with blood-lust.

_What does it mean to say (as Jung does, amongst others) that Hitler was some kind of incarnation of the German collective psyche, of the national myth (made all the more absurd by Hitler being a puny black-haired guy, not a strapping blonde athlete)? What are the myths at the heart of Nazism, from where do they derive their power...?
All of which I could only scratch the surface of. And the more I scratched, the deeper I found myself in the bowels of Western Culture. And it's not a pleasant place..."  
[Nikolai Galen]

Nicolai about the radioplay

"For the radio version of Hitler we found ourselves layering and treating voices in ways which led me to thinking that we were purposely giving voice to Hitler and the other protagonists without (anyway impossible for the medium) giving them body. The voices are disembodied. They float by like phantoms. The texts we chose for the radio play are particularly obsessed with death - one could say, with the factory production of phantoms. One could also say that Hitler aimed to make his Promethean utopia (which would of course have been the dystopia to end all dystopias) out of death (something he had in common with other great dictators). Perhaps out of death he thought he would be able to resurrect a new ('better' for das Volk at least) kind of life. Instead, out of death he only produced the final vast and awful nothing of silence and phantoms. The phantoms of the dead. The phantoms of those - people and cultures - that can never be resurrected. 

But our terrible times are less different from those terrible times than perhaps we would like to believe. War carries on unabated in its demented fury, and some of those wars - those in the Middle East - have some of their roots in World War Two. And as we rape and ravage the planet, we also are leaving behind us silence and phantoms, with much more, and maybe much worse, to come. On the one hand it seems an absurd question to say, 'George Bush was a little Hitler' but I'm not so sure. The veneer may be politer, and the process of gaining power more 'democratic' (but not for the victims, they had no say in it); but was, say, Bush really so much less Promethean, especially when the juggernaut power of the USA is looked at as a whole. 

But I don't want to single out the USA, many other states are just as bad, only not as powerful. Anyway, it seems to me that what happened seventy-odd years ago has rather faded from the memories of many, especially those for whom only the grandparents lived through that war. Trying to bring the horror of Hitler and his accomplices back to life seems to me essential. But let them stay only as voices, as phantom voices. The attempt to give them flesh (as in cinema) just doesn't seem to carry sufficient horror to be anything other than another entertainment, just another war movie. But when we only hear the voices, they enter our heads, we can't keep them out, and therefore we have to engage with them. We have to never forget them and we have to recognise that the times have not changed very much at all." 
[Nikolai Galen]

_BIOS_
Nikolai Galen lives in Istanbul, and is a writer, director, actor and singer.
He first performed in the Netherlands with his then band The Shrubs.
He has acted in various Pantheatre productions: Nero, La Planque Aux Anges, Shadow Boxing, Stealing The Show and Pandora's Box.
His writings include the lyrics of his records, the solo performance piece God Is A Shareholder about contemporary Russia (premiered in New York in 1998), the text, about love and power, of Pandora's Box (premiered in London in 2000), and Shut Your Eyes (English version) / Ferme Les Yeux (French version), an exploration of sexual relations (premiered in Malérargues in 2007). He has also directed a film version of Shut Your Eyes.
He has written two bilingual English and French plays - Brain about the workings of thought which he also directs (premiered in Malérargues in 2010), and Lovebed about small evils (premiered in Istanbul in 2011).
He has written and assembled a theatre text about Hitler, and, together with Dolf Planteijdt he made a radio version at Worm in Rotterdam during Autumn 2012. They intend to make a live performance version of the radio play during 2013.

Dolf Planteijdt lives in Amsterdam.
Dolf is a musician/composer but also a recording engineer/sound mixer. He does theatre music and plays off and on with his band Morzelpronk. For years he had the recording studio called 'Joke's Koeienverhuurbedrijf' in which the dutch punk band The Ex made lots of their records. (but also loads of other bands from the 80ties/90ties like Negazione, Dog faced Hermans, Dull Schicksal and Plan kruutntoone). Since 2000 he records on (exotic) location with 'The Rent-a-Cow Mobile'. With Nick Hobbs he recorded in Wales, Oslo and Istanbul that way. The past fifteen years he has worked intensively with dutch multi media-artist Peter Zegveld.

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