Nikolay Pavlovich Okhlopkov

Soviet theatrical director
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Quick Facts
Born:
May 2 [May 15, New Style], 1900, Irkutsk, Siberia, Russia
Died:
Jan. 8, 1967, Moscow, U.S.S.R. (aged 66)

Nikolay Pavlovich Okhlopkov (born May 2 [May 15, New Style], 1900, Irkutsk, Siberia, Russia—died Jan. 8, 1967, Moscow, U.S.S.R.) was a Soviet experimental-theatrical director and producer. He was one of the first modern directors to introduce productions in the round on an arena stage in an effort to restore intimacy between the actors and the audience.

Okhlopkov studied fine arts and music before enrolling in the Meyerhold State Theatrical Workshops in Moscow (1922). An actor in the Meyerhold Theatre from 1923, he was director (1931–36) of the Realistic Theatre in Moscow (formerly the Moscow Art Theatre Studio). Drawing on the principles of Greek, Chinese, Japanese, and Shakespearean theatre, he designed an elaborate stage in the centre of the house and often placed the seated spectators inside the field of action. Although he produced chiefly political and proletarian dramas tailored to Soviet ideology, his experimentalism eventually led the government to close the Realistic Theatre (1938). From 1938 to 1943, Okhlopkov was a producer at the Vakhtangov Theatre and from 1943 to 1966 at the Moscow Drama (after 1954 called the Mayakovsky Theatre). He also produced and acted in a number of Soviet films.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.
Russian:
Kamerny Teatr

Kamerny Theatre, small, intimate theatre founded in Moscow in 1914 by the Russian director Aleksandr Tairov (q.v.) to support his experimental synthetic theatre that incorporated all theatrical arts—ballet, opera, music, mime, and drama—as an alternative to the naturalistic presentations of Konstantin Stanislavsky’s realism at the Moscow Art Theatre. Instead of staging plays of everyday life, Tairov offered a theatre of heroics, in which the hero was to elevate the audience above the quotidian levels of existence. The Kamerny developed as an experimental theatre specializing in foreign plays. Among the many reforms associated with the Kamerny are the use of music, dance, gesture, and mime and the inclusion of chanted or intoned speech. In many of its choreographed movements, which made use of offbeat rhythms and atonal sound patterns, the Kamerny anticipated certain dance configurations now associated with modern dance. Enlarged to 1,210 seats in 1930 by Tairov, the Kamerny achieved its greatest recognition in 1934 in Moscow with its production of Optimisticheskaya tragediya (“The Optimistic Tragedy”), an acceptance of Soviet Socialist Realism, which he interspersed with his experimentation. Thereafter, the experimental nature of the theatre declined. The theatre closed in 1950 with Tairov’s death.