Helena Kaut-Howson, who is directing the UK premiere of Dea Loher’s Innocence, which opens at the Arcola this week (8 January 2010), talks about Loher’s work and why she remains largely unknown in the UK.
Dea Loher was born in Traunstein, Bavaria in 1964 where she grew up surrounded by firearms rather than literature, as her father was a hunter/forester. She escaped to study philosophy and literature in Munich but was disappointed with the conservative teaching methods which made no connection between life and what she found in books (her obsession). She went on to study playwrighting at the Berlin Academy of Arts.
She was encouraged by her tutor, the radical playwright and poet Heiner Muller, to complete her first play – Olga’s Room. The play was produced at the prestigious Volksbuhne and also at Talia Theatre in Hamburg which became associated with all her subsequent work – Tattoo, written in 1991, Leviathan (1993), Stranger’s House (1997), Adam Geist, (1998), Manhattan Medea (1999), Klara’s Case (2000) and The Third sector (2001).
So, why has she been missing for so long from the British theatre scene? There is no explanation for this absence except for our traditional resistance to change, attachment to realism and conventional rules of dramaturgy. It is precisely those rules that Dea Loher challenges in her plays – and nowhere more so than in Innocence.
First staged in Berlin in 2003, Innocence is widely regarded her best play to date. Sexy and funny, the play presents five loosely connected stories from the edge of society, mysteriously interwoven to create a lyrical and darkly comic passion play for our times. Disturbing, poignant but ultimately hopeful innocence asks unanswerable questions about conscience and compassion in a disfigured world.
Though it touches on relevant social issues Innocence is not merely a play about urban alienation and loneliness, it cannot be classified as social drama nor can it be pigeonholed as ‘absurdist’ or surreal. It compels the audience to look beyond its surface, to review this story and find its new meaning, unencumbered by conventional thinking.
Innocence continues at the Arcola until 30 January 2010.