-
UK's Starmer scrambles to limit Epstein fallout as aides quit
-
US skater Malinin 'full of confidence' after first Olympic gold
-
Sydney police pepper spray protesters during rallies against Israeli president's visit
-
Israel says killed four militants exiting Gaza tunnel
-
Franzoni sets pace in Olympic team combined
-
Captain's injury agony mars 'emotional' Italy debut at T20 World Cup
-
Family matters: Thaksin's party down, maybe not out
-
African players in Europe: Ouattara fires another winner for Bees
-
Pressure grows on UK's Starmer over Epstein fallout
-
Music world mourns Ghana's Ebo Taylor, founding father of highlife
-
HK mogul's ex-workers 'broke down in tears' as they watched sentencing
-
JD Vance set for Armenia, Azerbaijan trip
-
Sydney police deploy pepper spray as Israeli president's visit sparks protests
-
EU warns Meta it must open up WhatsApp to rival AI chatbots
-
Scotland spoil Italy's T20 World Cup debut with big win
-
Israeli president says 'we will overcome evil' at Bondi Beach
-
Munsey leads Scotland to 207-4 against Italy at T20 World Cup
-
Japan restarts world's biggest nuclear plant again
-
Bangladesh poll rivals rally on final day of campaign
-
Third impeachment case filed against Philippine VP Duterte
-
Wallaby winger Nawaqanitawase heads to Japan
-
Thailand's Anutin rides wave of nationalism to election victory
-
Venezuela's Machado says ally kidnapped by armed men after his release
-
Maye longs for do-over as record Super Bowl bid ends in misery
-
Seahawks' Walker rushes to Super Bowl MVP honors
-
Darnold basks in 'special journey' to Super Bowl glory
-
Japan's Takaichi may struggle to soothe voters and markets
-
Seahawks soar to Super Bowl win over Patriots
-
'Want to go home': Indonesian crew abandoned off Africa demand wages
-
Asian stocks track Wall St rally as Tokyo hits record on Takaichi win
-
Bad Bunny celebrates Puerto Rico in joyous Super Bowl halftime show
-
Three prominent opposition figures released in Venezuela
-
Israeli president says 'we shall overcome this evil' at Bondi Beach
-
'Flood' of disinformation ahead of Bangladesh election
-
Arguments to begin in key US social media addiction trial
-
Zakhary Rhinoplasty & Facial Plastic Surgery Clinic Wins Consumer Choice Award for Excellence in Cosmetic Procedures
-
Gemdale Gold Announces Approval for Listing on the TSX Venture Exchange
-
Money Mentors Wins Consumer Choice Award for Credit & Debt Counselling Services in Northern Alberta
-
Abasca Resources Announces Assay Results from the Summer 2025 Drill Program and Start of Winter Drilling at its Loki Flake Graphite Deposit
-
Eagle Plains' Partner Refined Energy Corp. Mobilizes Geophysical Team to the Dufferin West Project, Saskatchewan
-
Fraser Valley Pre-Owned Wins Consumer Choice Award for Automobile Sales - Pre-Owned in Abbotsford
-
Lions Park Denture Clinic Recognized With Consumer Choice Award for Denturists in Southern Alberta
-
ATHA Energy Provides Post CAD $63 Million Financing Plans - Focused on Growth and Discovery at the Angilak Uranium Project
-
Ayrmid Appoints ACA Pharma as Exclusive Distributor for Omisirge(R) across Greater China and Southeast Asia
-
Who is the Best Facelift Surgeon in Florida?
-
FireFox Gold Expands the Northeast Zone, including 54.91 g/t Gold over 1.95 Metres in 95 Metre Step-out at Mustajärvi Gold Project, Finland
-
Dr. Jonathan Spages Expands Diabetes Reversal Practice Across New States, Adds Clinical Team to Meet Growing Demand
-
Agronomics Limited Announces Net Asset Value Calculation as at 31 December 2025
-
UK-Based Vesalic Limited Emerges from Stealth with Landmark Discovery of Potential Non-CNS Driver of Motor Neuron Diseases, including ALS, and Breakthrough Therapeutic and Diagnostic Opportunities
-
Gotterup tops Matsuyama in playoff to win Phoenix Open
'The cultural front': Ukraine theatre goes underground
It's an opening night like no other at Mykolaiv's theatre, with the audience ushered down into an underground shelter this week for the first performance since war broke out.
"We need this place to fight on the cultural front too," says artistic director Artiom Svytsoun.
The tiny underground stage and the minimalist set provides "a form of 'art therapy'" for the people who have stayed in Mykolaiv and need something other than the grinding fear of war.
Welcoming audience members, giving tours of the subterranean theatre and taking care of the myriad technical details, 41-year-old Svytsoun is the beating heart of the operation. He is the one who worked to get the theatre reopened in the relative safety of an underground bunker.
With the help of a European aid fund, his team took two months to transform a shelter four metres below ground into the 35-seat venue, its irregular white walls covered with a fresco reminiscent of classical theatres.
The strategic port city of Mykolaiv had a population of half a million souls before Russia invaded on February 24.
Now it bears the scars of the many bombardments it has endured almost daily for the past six months.
Three hundred metres (yards) from the elegant neo-classical building that houses the theatre stands the twisted concrete shell of the regional administration, which was hit by a missile on March 29 that killed 37 people.
- Name change -
According to the local town hall, the city has enjoyed just 25 attack-free days since February 24.
President Volodymyr Zelensky has said that, along with Kharkiv in the north and the eastern Donbas region, Mykolaiv is the most heavily bombed city in Ukraine, despite the fact that the front line is about 20 kilometres away.
The destruction has not been limited to military targets. Three universities were recently bombed and, according to regional authorities, 123 cultural institutions have been destroyed in the region since the fighting began.
Another effect of the invasion on the Mykolaiv theatre has been a name change.
The former Mykolaiv Russian Drama Theatre is now the Mykolaiv Theatre of Dramatic Arts.
In the tiny dressing room, its walls covered with photos of Soviet, Ukrainian and Hollywood actors, Kateryna Chernolishenko, 43, receives the final touches to her stage make-up and is in a good mood.
"I'm very happy to be back on our stage, back home, and I think it's important that art can be a support for people," says the actress, who like her fellow thespians volunteered to take part in this premiere.
Her colleague Marina Vassyleva, who is about to don a wedding dress, adds emphatically: "Actors, in these circumstances, are the doctors of the human soul."
"I see my mission and the meaning of my life right now. I am needed here in Mykolaiv," she says.
- 'Makes our lives easier' -
Since the start of the war, three of the theatre's actors have joined the army and another 20 percent of the troupe have taken refuge elsewhere in Ukraine, or abroad - a modest proportion in a town that has lost more than half its population, according to the town hall.
The company is used to playing in a 450-seater theatre.
Now the plays are being adapted and squeezed into the "stage in the shelter", as it is called.
But despite the war, it is not just about performing patriotic works. After a curtain-raiser paying tribute to Ukraine, the first play of the new season, by a contemporary national author, is an absurdist play about "the realisation of our desires", says Svytsoun.
Fellow audience member Oleksander Skotnikov, 42, agrees. "When we are under the bombs, as we are now, the theatre gives us a big smile and inspires people to keep on living".
C.Garcia--AMWN