Shusha State Musical Drama Theater to start new season
Shusha State Musical Drama Theater will open a new season with Jafar Jabbarli`s play "Faded Flowers" on September 8.
The play "Faded Flowers" has been staged many times by the theater, which once again proves that Jafar Jabbarli brought new voice, form, content and new qualities to the national drama through his talent and hard work, Azernews reports.
All this highlights the uniqueness of the prominent dramatist's approach to a separate individual and relations between people from a special point of view.
It should be noted that Jafar Jabbarli's "Pale Flowers" tells about Sara's pure love for her cousin and the crime of Gulnisa, Sara's mother. Gulnisa is not satisfied with poisoning Sara's father, but also wants to seize all his wealth. In order not to reveal all these things, he separated Bahram from Sara and married his own daughter. As a result, Sarah becomes a victim of infidelity.
Tickets can be purchased on the iTicket.az website and at the city ticket offices.
Jafar Jabbarli is a great Azerbaijani playwright and one of the founders of the national film dramaturgy. He occupied a prominent place in the development of Azerbaijani art and literature as a playwright, poet, theater director, translator, and screenwriter.
He was a prominent representative of progressive romanticism, whose oeuvres reflected the sharp contradictions of Azerbaijani society.
Jabbarli started writing at an early age. His first poem was published in 1911, in the local newspaper Hagigat-i Afkar. In the following years, he penned over 20 plays, as well as stories, poems, essays, and articles.
He also translated European classics, such as Shakespeare's Othello and Hamlet, Pierre Beaumarchais's The Marriage of Figaro, etc.
The writer's focus was on the theater where he achieved huge success. His plays Baku War, Devoted Sariyya or Laughter Through Tears, Shah Nasraddin, Bride of Fire, Sevil, and Almaz gained widespread popularity.
In his plays, Jabbarli was keen on women's freedom, the elimination of gender inequality, and the solution to problems pertaining to mass ignorance among women.
Two of his plays, Sevil and Almaz, both written in 1928, focused on women's role and their struggle against patriarchy.
In 1929, Sevil film was shot based on the play of the same name. It was the first domestic film against gender inequality.
In this play, Jabbarli describes two women, Sevil, a beautiful woman, who obeyed her husband unquestioningly, and Dilbar, Balash's mistress, and a man named Balash, who disliked his past, repudiated traditions and customs and turned away from his own father.
Inspired by the success of the play Sevil, Jafar Jabbarli started to work on a screenplay for the film Almaz . Unfortunately, he could not finish it amid health issues. His friends and colleagues continued his cinematographic activities and completed the shooting of the film that was released after Jabbarli's death. The film tells about Almaz, who was not scared to come across a "kulak" - a wealthy peasant, called Haji Ahmad. She fought against kulaks, sparked a revolution in the village, led her struggle, and won.
After so many years, Jabbarli's legacy still continues to inspire people. The museum named after him was established in 1934. Over 137,000 exhibits are stored at the Jafar Jabbarli Theater Museum.
The Jafar Jabbarli State Theater Museum systematically holds events dedicated to prominent theatrical figures, lectures, and exhibitions. In 2004, the Union of Theater Workers awarded the museum the Golden Dervish Award for the acquisition and storage of materials on the history of the theater.
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