History
History of the AnglistenTheater Since 1980
The AnglistenTheater of the University of Augsburg is an amateur student theatre group that has performed plays in English since 1980. It was founded by Rudolf Beck who produced and directed plays between 1981 and 1990. He was succeeded by Ute Legner and Roger Evans, who directed their first play, Caryl Churchill’s Top Girls, in 1988. Ute Legner was in charge of the AnglistenTheater from 1991 to 2006. During her time more than 15 contemporary plays were shown at the University and at the Abraxas theatre, many of them for the first time on a German stage. After an interval of 6 years, Rudolf Beck revived the AnglistenTheater in 2012 with Simon Stephens’ One Minute.
Plays produced since 1981, directed by Rudolf Beck (RB), Ute Legner (UL), Roger Evans (RE), Kathrin Bayer (KB), Signe Sturup-Hackenberg (SH)
[GP = German Premiere; WP = World Premiere]
1980 AnglistenTheater set up by Rudolf Beck in autumn 1980
1981 Oscar Wilde, The Importance of Being Earnest (RB)
1982 William Shakespeare, A Midsummer Night's Dream (RB)
1983 Arthur Miller, The Crucible (RB)
1984 William Wycherley, The Country Wife (RB)
1985 William Shakespeare, The Taming of the Shrew (RB)
1986 Brendan Behan, The Hostage (RB)
1987 William Shakespeare, A Winter's Tale (RB)
1988 David Hare, Teeth'n'Smiles (RB)
1988 Caryl Churchill, Top Girls (UL, RE)
1989 Christopher Marlowe, Doctor Faustus (RB)
1989 Jim Neu, Andrew Horn, The Big Blue (WP; adapt. dir. UL, RE)
1989 Jane Thornton, Handle With Care (GP ; UL)
1989 Geoff Lynam, Robbie and Steve (GP; RE)
1990 William Shakespeare, Macbeth (RB)
1990 Jon Gaunt, Hooligans (GP; UL)
1990 Katie Buchanan, Trevelyan Wright, Cut The Girls Talk! This Is War (GP; UL, RE)
1991 Anglistentheater, Playing For Time ... Almost A Musical (WP; UL, RE)
1991 Richard Cameron, Can't Stand Up For Falling Down (GP; UL, RE)
1991 Eric Prince, Wildsea Wildsea (GP; UL)
1992 Claire Luckham, Trafford Tanzi (GP; UL)
1993 Lance Flynn, The Dorm (GP; UL)
1993-4 John Binnie, A Little Older (GP; UL)
1995 David McGillivray, Walter Zerlin jr., They Came From Mars (adapt. AnglTh; GP; UL)
1996 Robert Hamilton, Giovanni's Women (GP; UL)
1997 Gordon Steel, Like A Virgin (GP; UL)
1998 John Godber, Bouncers (GP; UL)
1999 Tim Fountain, Morning Has Broken (GP; UL)
2000 John Godber, Bouncers 2000,The New Edition (adapt. UL; GP; UL)
2003 William Mastrosimone, Extremities (UL)
2006 Jessica Blank, Erik Jensen, The Exonerated (GP; UL)
2012 Simon Stephens, One Minute (RB)
2013 Harold Pinter, Ashes to Ashes (RB)
2014 John Osborne, Look Back in Anger (RB)
2014 Martin Crimp, The Country (RB)
2015 Two Victorian Farces: John Maddison Morton, Box and Cox; Joseph Stirling Coyne, How to Settle Accounts with Your Laundress (RB)
2015 Simon Stephens, Pornography (RB)
2016 Pinter Double Bill: Harold Pinter, Night School and The Lover (RB)
2016 Sarah Kane, 4.48 Psychosis (RB)
2017 Samuel Beckett, Krapp's Last Tape (RB)
2017 Andrew Bovell, Speaking in Tongues (RB)
2017 Diane Samuels, Kindertransport (RB)
2018 Ben Power, Medea (after Euripides; RB)
2018 Amanda Whittington, The Thrill of Love (GP; RB)
2019 Nick Payne, Electra (after Sophocles; GP; RB)
2022 Harold Pinter, Three Short Plays: Landscape; Night; Family Voices (RB, KB)
2022 Three Studies in Cruelty: Harold Pinter, Mountain Language; Samuel Beckett, What Where; Samuel Beckett, Catastrophe (RB)
2023 Ellen McLaughlin, The Trojan Women (after Euripides; GP; RB, SH)
2024 Caryl Churchill, Escaped Alone; Here We Go (RB, SH, KB)
2024 Jez Butterworth, The River (GP; RB)
2024 Harold Pinter, 2 Revue Sketches: Interview, Special Offer (SH)