Nina Király (1940-2018) was a Mari Jászai award-winning theater historian, dramaturg, an expert on Polish and Eastern-European theater, who lived and worked in Budapest, Hungary.[1][2] From 1993 to 1999 she was the Director of The Hungarian Theatre Museum and Institute and later became the advisor on international theaters and festivals for the Hungarian National Theater and the co-creator of the International MITEM festival.[1][3] During her years as the Director of the Hungarian Theater Institute[4] she published many theater books that were previously not translated or available for the Hungarian public, introducing the works of such international luminaries as Jan Kott, Anatoly Vasiliev, Eugenio Barba, Tadeusz Kantor. She spoke 4 languages.[1]
Born in 1940 in Moscow. In 1962, she graduated from the local Moscow State University, majoring in linguistics and anthropology, and from that year worked at the Russian Academy of Sciences.[1] In 1964 she moved to Budapest with her husband. Between 1964 and 1994 she worked at the Department of Slavic Studies at the Faculty of Humanities of the Eötvös Loránd University, first as a teaching assistant and then as an associate professor. In 1973 she received her Ph.D. Between 1984 and 1990 she was a lecturer in theater theory and history at Jagiellonian University in Kraków. Between 1993 and 1999 he was director of the National Theater History Museum and Institution. Between 1999 and 2003 she worked as a freelance critic and art consultant. Between 2003 and 2004 she was a member of the New Theater in charge of international affairs. Between 2004 and 2005, editor of the Pamietnik Teatralny magazine in Warsaw. Between 2005 and 2013 she worked at the Csokonai Theater in Debrecen. Between 2013 and 2018 she was a member of the National Theater. Her husband, Gyula Király, was a literary historian.
A full list of publications can be found on www.kiralyfoundation.hu/kiraly-nina
Zarándok és ellenálló- Beszélő kritika,1992/1[25]
Változatok az emigrációra- Magyar Nemzet, 1992-08[26]
Kantor- A visszatérés- (Kantor- The Return) Beszélő kritika, 1994/4[27]
OSZMI igazgatói kinevezés- Magyar Nemzet, 1994.05[28]
Tadeusz Kantor a Lengyel Intézetben- (Tadeusz Kantor at the Polish Institute) Magyar Nemzet, 1994.11[29]
PQ, Kurír, (1995.07)[30]
Mennyit nyom a latban egy ezüst- (How Much is a Silver Worth) Népszabadság, 1995.július.15[31]
Nina színháza, (Nina's Theater) Kurír, 1995.08[32]
Dán királyfi minden mennyiségben, (Danish Prince in All Quantities) Népszava, 1998.01[33]
A végtelen gondolat- Jan Kott esszéiről- (The Endless Though- On Jan Kott's Essays)- Népszabadság, 1998.01[34]
Ablak a tragédia világára- (Window onto The Tragedy's World), Népszabadság könyv kritika, 1999.11[35]
Határtalanul - (No Borders- Tunde Trojan's interview with Nina Kiraly) Trojan Tünde beszélget Király Ninával[36]
«Балтийский дом»: «Дядя Ваня» Люка Персиваля и «Три сестры» Римаса Туминаса (interjú Ninával Tuminasról)[37]
Jászai Mari díj, (Jaszai award) Magyar Nemzet, 2012.03[38]
A kerítőnő-Peterdi Nagy László búcsúja Ninától (The Procuress- A Farewell to Nina from Laszlo Peterdi Nagy), 2018[39]
Remembering Nina Kiraly (by Patricia Paszt)[40]
“We Understand Our Culture Better Through The Other’s”: Interview With Dramaturg And Theatre Historian Nina Király(1940–2018).[1]
Nina Kiraly's professional library consisting of more than a 1000 books on theater written in Polish, Hungarian, English, and French,[1] together with her manuscripts and correspondence with such theater directors and theoreticians as Jan Kott, Eugenio Barba, Zbigniew Raszewski, Anatoly Vasiliev were donated by the family in 2019 to the National Széchényi Library in Budapest, Hungary where they will be made researchable for the general public.[2]
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