Adolf Yakovlevich Shapiro (Russian: Адольф Яковлевич Шапиро, Latvian: Ādolfs Šapiro, born July 4, 1939, Kharkov, USSR (now Kharkiv, Ukraine)) is a Soviet, Latvian and Russian theater director, acting teacher, playwright and author. People's Artist of the Latvian SSR (1986), Merited Master of the Arts of the Russian Federation (2019), Laureate of the State Prize of the Latvian SSR (1987).[1]
Biography
Adolf Shapiro graduated from the Directing Department of the Kharkiv National Kotlyarevsky University of Arts then continued his studies in Moscow at the Maria Knebel's Graduate Laboratory of Directing.[2] Adolf Shapiro was a student and successor of Maria Knebel, who was a student of Konstantin Stanislavsky and Michael Chekhov. Shapiro has earned a worldwide reputation as a preeminent interpreter of Chekhov's work. For more than half a century, Mr. Shapiro has staged highly acclaimed productions across three continents.
From 1962 to 1992 he worked in Latvia as the Artistic Director of the Latvian State Theater of Young Spectators (TYuZ), renamed the Youth Theatre in 1989.[3] His most notable works at that time include Ivanov and Wood Demon by Anton Chekhov, City at Dawn by Alexei Arbuzov, TheForest by Alexander Ostrovsky, Golden Horse by Jānis Rainis, Peer Gynt by Henrik Ibsen, The Prince of Homburg by Heinrich Kleist, Fear and Misery of the Third Reich by Bertolt Brecht, Tomorrow There Came War by Boris Vasilyev, Democracy! by Joseph Brodsky. The theater had two buildings and two troupes (Russian and Latvian) and was widely known both at home and abroad. The company has won numerous awards at international festivals, including the Grand Prix and Gold Medal at the Theatre on Screen festival in Rome, Italy for the adaptation of The Waltz Invention by Vladimir Nabokov.[1]
Major Russian playwrights wrote plays specially for the theater.[3]
Adolf Shapiro taught acting and directing classes at the Riga Conservatory.[1]
In 1990, Shapiro was elected World President of the International Association of Theatre for Children and Young People (ASSITEJ), and since 1994 he has been President of the Russian Center of ASSITEJ.[3]
Since 1993 Adolph Shapiro has been working as an independent director and theater teacher.[1]
Shapiro has taught and conducted master classes in:
Greece – Athens (continuous cooperation with the Center for Development and Culture "AVANTGARDE"), Delphi (The European Cultural Centre of Delphi (E.C.C.D.), Meteora, Syros Island[4]
Shapiro works extensively in Estonia [3] In 2003 he was elected Honorary Doctor of the Performing Arts Department of the Tallinn Theater Academy and the Viljandi College of Arts.
In 2007, he was appointed Head of Art Projects at the Bryantsev Youth Theater (St. Petersburg, Russia).
Shapiro has written plays staged in Russia and abroad and is the author of the books Inter-Mission and The Curtain Dropped (Druzhba Narodov magazine award for the best publication of the year).[1]
In March 2014, along with a number of other cultural figures, he expressed his disagreement with the policy of the Russian government in Crimea[5]
Merited Master of the Arts of the Russian Federation (June 13, 2019) – for lifetime achievements and great contribution to the development of Russian culture and art[7][1]
Laureate of the State Prize of Latvia (1987)[3][1]
Laureate of the International Stanislavsky Prize (2005)[8][1]
Laureate of the Moscow City Hall Literature and Art Prize (production of The Last Ones by Maxim Gorky, Tabakov Studio Theater)[9]
Baltic House Festival Laureate (Best Director, The Threepenny Opera by Bertolt Brecht, Linnateater, Tallinn)[10]
Laureate of the Union of Theater Workers of Russia Award Hit of the Season[6]
2008 – Grand Prix (Children of the Sun by M. Gorky, Maly Theater of Russia) [9]
Lucia di Lammermoor by Gaetano Donizetti (2009) (the highest national theater award Golden Mask for the best opera performance, the best female role – Khibla Gerzmava as Lucia, the best costumes in the musical theater – Elena Stepanova)[12]
Manon Lescaut by Giacomo Puccini (2016) (Anna Netrebko as Manon. The highest national theater award Golden Mask for the best opera duo – Anna Netrebko and Yusif Eivazov)[13][14]
Other Theaters of Moscow
The Last Ones by Maxim Gorky (Tabakov Studio Theater, 1995) (the highest national theater award Golden Mask for the best female role – O. Yakovleva as Sofia Kolomiytseva, special jury prize – OlegTabakov as Ivan Kolomiytsev) [1]
In the Bar of a Tokyo Hotel by Tennessee Williams (Mayakovsky Theater, 1996)
The Lower Depths by Maxim Gorky (Tabakov Studio Theater, 2000) – Golden Mask award nomination [1]
Children of the Sun by Maxim Gorky (Maly Theater of Russia, 2008) – Grand Prix – Hit of the Season Award of the Union of Theater Workers of Russia
Samara
Bumbarash, a musical by Yuly Kim and Vladimir Dashkevich (Samara Theater for Young Spectators "SamArt", 1997), the highest national theater award Golden Mask for the best set design – Yury Kharikov [6]
Mother Courage by Bertolt Brecht (Samara Theater for Young Spectators "SamArt", 2001, the highest national theater award Golden Mask for the best set design – Yury Kharikov) [6]
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