The History of the National Theatre

Natręci

On 19th November 1765 His Royal Highness Stanisław August Poniatowski's Operatic Players presented their first performance of Józef Bielawski's comedy The Interlopers (Natręci) based on a play by Molière.

Since the Operatic Players were the first professional company to play in Polish, it has become a tradition to commemorate the date as that of the birth of Polish National Theatre.

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Two years later, the Players' activity was interrupted by the political disturbances, which led to the First Partition of Poland (as a result of which parts of the country's territory were annexed by its three powerful neighbours: Russia, Austria and Prussia). The theatre bill passed in 1774 allowed the company to resume its activities. No longer boasting the title of court players, from then on it was directed by private entrepreneurs. The actors performed in Radziwiłł Palace (now the residence of the President of Poland) where Wojciech Bogusławski - actor, playwright, theatre producer and stage director, considered as the 'father of Polish theatre' - made his debut in 1778.  

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In 1779 the theatre acquired its own building, which was to become its permanent seat for the next thirty years. In 1825, in view of the growing dilapidation of the old building, the decision was taken to construct an entirely new theatre complex, to be designed for this purpose by Antonio Corazzi.

Inaugurated on 24th February 1833, it took the name of the Grand Theatre (as a result of the successive partitions of Poland, the eastern part of Poland, including Warsaw, was incorporated into Russia, whose rulers, especially after the unsuccessful Polish national uprising of 1830-1831, were unwilling to tolerate the functioning of a 'National' theatre).

In the intermediary period of 1829-1833 the Variety Theatre came into being which presented light plays in the public hall of the Charitable Society building. 

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In 1833 the Variety found shelter in the Grand Theatre's right wing: initially in the Sale Redutowe (Mask Ball Rooms), and eventually in its own separate premises (1836). Until 1916 the whole enterprise known at first as Warsaw Theatres and then as Government Theatres of Warsaw, was administered by Russian officials.

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The early 19th century saw the growing division among companies specializing in either opera, ballet or drama performances, and the fact of acquiring a permanent multi-stage theatre house helped legitimized this division. 

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This period in the history of the Grand Theatre was marked among others by the successful parade of French plays, the appearances of Helena Modrzejewska (Modjeska), the first performances of works by Polish playwrights and Stanisław Moniuszko's operas, but also by major patriotic manifestations in the country, the fire which partly consumed the Variety Theatre in 1883, and the revolutionary upheaval of 1905.

After the withdrawal of the Russian authorities from Warsaw in July 1915, the management of the Variety was taken over by the 'association of comedy and drama actors' and its repertoire immediately broadened to include Romantic plays as well as the most famous works of modern drama ( by Ibsen, Gogol, and Shaw); it was also in that period that the celebrated first performance of Stanisław Wyspiański's Noc listopadowa (The November Night) took place. 

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In 1919 (a year after Poland regained her state independence) the Variety gained itself a status of a municipal theatre, only to be ravaged by fire a few months later. The company moved to the nearby Summer Theatre first and then to the Bogusławski Theatre. When its own stage in Corazzi building was restored in 1924, the Variety changed its name to the National Theatre. 

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Four years later, the small-stage Nowy (New) Theatre was set up in the Sale Redutowe (Mask Ball Rooms, which in 1919-1925 witnessed the theatrical experiments of Juliusz Osterwa's Reduta Theatre). It was in this form that the National Theatre (managed by the Society for the Propagation of Theatre Art since 1934) functioned until the outbreak of World War II in 1939.

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After the cataclysms of the war years, during which Corazzi building was damaged twice - first in September 1939, and then during the Warsaw Uprising of August 1944 - the renovated National Theatre in Warsaw reopened in 1949. Its postwar fates did reflect to a large extent the major events in the history of Soviet-dominated Poland: the officially imposed madness of the so-called socialist realism, the short-lived period of relative intellectual liberty following Stalin's death in 1953, the National's involvement in the events of 1968 (when the communist leaders' decision to ban the production of Adam Mickiewicz's The Forefathers' Eve staged by Kazimierz Dejmek ignited a students revolt), and the gloomy years of the martial law in the early 1980s.

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Headed by several eminent directors and famous for its celebrated actors and over a dozen splendid productions, the National was nonetheless often severely criticised by both public and theatre reviewers.

In 1985 the theatre again burned out. Its reconstruction which took twelve years , was completed only after the overthrow of the communist rule in Poland. In 1997 the National Theatre was reopened under the artistic directorship of Jerzy Grzegorzewski.

Grzegorzewski formulated the programme of the national stage as 'the domain of Wyspiański:

We are constantly looking for ways of expressing his intentions in a modern stage arrangement by a modern gesture, by the modern way of speaking on the stage (...) What I have in mind here, is a manner that does not dismiss the whole experience of 20th century art, that does not reject the changes that have occurred as a result of the new experience in which the generations living after Wyspiański have taken part up to our time."
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Under the artistic directorship of Jerzy Grzegorzewski the National has regained its traditional position of the foremost drama theatre in Poland. Following his resignation, in September 2003, Jan Englert was appointed as a new Artistic Director of the National Theatre in Warsaw.

  • HEAVEN AND HELL

    Although Maria Wojtyszko's play touches upon the painful subject of losing loved ones, Jakub Krofta's deft staging provides light entertainment for the whole family. Premiere: 22 February 2025

  • OTHER DELIGHTS

    This adaptation of the novel Other Delights is the second staging of one of Jerzy Pilch's works at the National Theatre, following The Holy Father's Skis.  

  • FAUST

    Faust is a story based on an ancient legend of a scholar who yearns so much for just a moment of happiness that he makes a pact with the devil. 

  • FEBLIK

    Małgorzata Maciejewska's surprising drama received the Tadeusz Różewicz Drama Award in 2022, the competition's first year. The show is directed by Lena Frankiewicz. 

  • A DREAM PLAY

    After the well-received Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Sławomir Narloch returned to the National Theatre with another premiere – A Dream Play by Strindberg.

     

  • KING LEAR

    King Lear may be Shakespeare's boldest examination of human nature. Jan Englert will play the title role in the National Theatre's production.

  • WAITING FOR GODOT

    "What do we do now? Wait. [...] We're waiting for Godot". Piotr Cieplak directs Waiting for Godot by Beckett. Is this a classic yet? Does it still have its avant-garde power?

  • FREDRO: THE JUBILEE YEAR

    To celebrate 230 years since Aleksander Fredro's birth, the National Theatre invites you to an evening dedicated to the life and works of Poland’s greatest comedy writer. 

  • TALES FROM THE VIENNA WOODS

    Małgorzata Bogajewska directs for the second time at the National Theatre. This time she draws on Ödön von Horváth's 1931 drama.

  • THE THEATRE MAKER

    The play by Thomas Bernhard, one of the most outstanding playwrights of the second half of the 20th century. In the title role – Jerzy Radziwiłowicz. 

  • ALICE'S WONDERLAND

    Have you ever quarreled with the Time or visited a forest where things have no names? Alice’s Wonderland is a musical performance based on the famous novel by Lewis Carroll. 

  • THE MISANTHROPE

    Jan Englert stages a classic play by Molière. What is Alcest's misanthropy: an uncompromising commitment to the truth or a doomed uprising against social conventions?

  • THE BOOKS OF JACOB

    In the middle of the 18th century Jacob Frank proclaimed the new principles of the Jewish faith. This is a staging of the most important novel by Polish Nobel Prize winner Olga Tokarczuk. 

  • THE DECALOGUE

    A meditation upon the moral foundations of the present – an iconic work of Polish cinema, rethought thirty-five years after its creation by Krzysztof Kieślowski and Krzysztof Piesiewicz. 

  • MARY STUART

    Grzegorz Wiśniewski returns to the classic drama about human passions interwoven in a ruthless machinery of history and intrigue.

  • MÜNCHHAUSEN FOR ADULTS

    Baron von Münchhausen lived in the 18th century and told incredible stories about himself. Maciej Wojtyszko directs his own play about the famous adventurer and mystifier.

  • Solidarity with Ukraine | Солідарні з Україною

    The ensemble of the National Theatre stands in solidarity with the Ukrainians who are fighting for the independence of their homeland.

  • PICNIC AT HANGING ROCK

    1900. On a hot, stormy day, Mrs Appleyard's boarding school residents go on a picnic near Hanging Rock. The new theatrical version of the Australian prose classics. 

  • SNAKE SKIN

    Artur Urbański directs his own play which main character is Ruth Berlau, one of Bertolt Brecht's closest associates and life companions.

  • AUTUMN SONATA

    A story about the need for love and acceptance, about an inherited emotional coldness, about the psychological costs of creativity. A theatrical version of a film script by Ingmar Bergman. 

  • MOTHER JOAN OF THE ANGELS

    A performance about the need to experience something that surpasses us. In the title role of the prioress – Małgorzata Kożuchowska. 

  • HEDDA GABLER

    Hedda Gabler – work by Henrik Ibsen, a master of psychological realism – in stage interpretation of director Kuba Kowalski is a poetic performance.


  • HOW TO BE LOVED

    This is the performance about love and moral responsibility for another person as well as the mechanisms controlling human memory. The dramatisation of the story by Kazimierz Brandys.


  • LUNGS

    Briliant, full of humour and touching love story of a young couple. Breakups and comebacks, passion and sex, the first important decisions and the search for meaning in a complex, modern world.


  • UHLANS

    The Museum of All-Time Polish Uhlans. Exhibits of the national exacerbation. A serious comedy in three acts about the entanglement in myths of Polishness. 


  • THE IMAGE MAKERS

    The truth about the essence of creation and responsibility in art. Director Viktor Sjöström is working on the film The Phantom Carriage, based on the novel by Nobel Prize winner Selma Lagerlöf. 

  • FOREFATHER'S EVE

    Mickiewicz's poetic drama interpreted by Lithuanian Master Eimuntas Nekrošius — theatre visionary known for his unique theatrical language.


  • KORDIAN

    The Polish nation's tragic choice: to die heroically in the name of a noble idea or live a life "making shoes for dogs"? — the alternative presented to Kordian in two parables.

  • FLEA THE SWINDLER

    Tremendous fun and great laughs – not just for kids. The antics of the Flea are directed by Anna Seniuk with the music composed by Maciej Małecki.


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