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Georgia Sacks Theatre Legend For 'Xenophobia'

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  • Georgia Sacks Theatre Legend For 'Xenophobia'

    GEORGIA SACKS THEATRE LEGEND FOR 'XENOPHOBIA'

    Agence France Presse
    Aug 17, 2011

    TBILISI - Georgia's culture minister controversially sacked its best
    known theatre director Robert Sturua as head of the national theatre
    for "xenophobic" comments he made earlier this year, officials said
    Wednesday.

    Culture Minister Nika Rurua ordered that "Robert Sturua be relieved
    from his post as artistic director of the Shota Rustaveli National
    Theatre" according to a ministerial decree that Sturua posted on his
    Facebook page.

    Sturua is known as an outspoken critic of Georgia's pro-Western
    President Mikheil Saakashvili and his dismissal prompted many to claim
    that the director was being punished for his anti-government views.

    But Rurua said he was forced to fire the director after he made
    "xenophobic" statements.

    "We are not going to finance xenophobia. Georgia is a multicultural
    country," Rurua said in a televised comment.

    Provoking public outrage, Sturua said in a May 20 interview with local
    Sakinformi news agency that "Saakashvili doesn't know what Georgian
    people need because he is Armenian."

    "I do not want Georgia to be governed by a representative of a
    different ethnicity," he said.

    Both Saakashvili's parents are Georgians.

    Strura was not available for further comment on Wednesday to explain
    the circumstances of his departure.

    "I am having a feast, sleeping, eating fruits. I am freed, I am
    free," Sturua wrote on his Facebook wall, as fans and friends posted
    expressions of sympathy.

    Sturua, 73, won international acclaim for his original interpretation
    of plays by Brecht, Shakespeare and Chekhov, as well as Georgian
    classics.

    He is one of the best known of all theatre directors from the
    ex-Soviet Union in the West, where his stunningly visual productions
    have astonished audiences.

    His 1992 version of "Hamlet" at London's Riverside Studios starring
    Alan Rickman has long been part of theatrical legend.

    The construction of the Rustaveli Theatre's Baroque and Renaissance
    building was funded by Armenian philanthropist Alexander Mantashev
    in 1901. It is the largest and most famous stage in the country with
    rich theatrical traditions.




    From: A. Papazian
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