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Alessandro Fersen
Alessandro Fersen
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Alessandro Fersen (born Aleksander Kazimierz Fajrajzen; 5 December 1911 – 3 October 2001) was a Polish-born Italian dramatist, actor, theater director, author and drama teacher. He is considered an influential figure in the 20th-century Italian theatre.[1]

Key Information

Life

[edit]

He was born as Aleksander Fajrajzen in Łódź to a Jewish family, that moved to Genoa in 1913. He studied at the University of Genoa under Giuseppe Rensi, graduating in philosophy in 1934 with a thesis later published under the title L'Universo come giuoco ("The Universe as a game").[2] Due to the racial laws of 1938 he moved to Paris (where he attended the Collège de France) and then in Eastern Europe.[3][4] Back in Italy in 1943, he participated in the resistance in Liguria, in a partisan group linked to the Italian Socialist Party, before working in Switzerland, where he became friends with Emanuele Luzzati and Giorgio Colli.[5]

He returned to Italy at the end of World War II, and after a period in which he devoted himself to political activity (being a member of the Secretary of the National Liberation Committee of Genoa and Liguria) and journalism (as a collaborator of newspapers Il Lavoro and Corriere del Popolo), in 1947 he began his activity as a theater director with the drama Leah Lebowitz, a play which he had taken from a Hasidic legend; this play started with the artistic collaboration, which will last decades, with Emanuele Luzzati, with whom founded the "Teatro Ebraico" ("Jewish Theatre"), staging dramas written by him such as Golem (1969), inspired by the Yiddish folklore, or Leviathan (1974), based on the techniques of mnemodrama.[3][6]

From 1947 Fersen worked for more than a decade for the Teatro Stabile in Genoa, directing adaptations of Shakespeare, Pirandello, Molière, Anouilh, among others. In 1957 he began a career as a drama teacher founding an acting school in Rome, the "Studio di arti sceniche", inspired by the Stanislavski's system.[3] He was also an author of critical and theoretical essays, aimed at an interdisciplinary theater, and an actor active on stage, on television and in films.[3]

Filmography

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Year Title Role Notes
1942 Un colpo di pistola Uncredited
1949 The Earth Cries Out Il rabbino
1949 The Walls of Malapaga Uncredited
1950 Il sentiero dell'odio
1951 Lorenzaccio
1953 Perdonami!
1953 Woman of the Red Sea Prof. Krauss
1953 Il viale della speranza Director Gabelli
1953 Puccini Padre di Delia
1953 Condemned to Hang Cesare Rovelli
1953 Jealousy Don Silvio
1953 Musoduro Dott. Biondi
1953 Viva la rivista!
1954 Delirio
1954 Theodora, Slave Empress Metropolita
1954 Ulysses Diomede
1954 The Two Orphans Michel Gérard - the father
1954 I cavalieri della regina
1955 The Lost City Padre de Rafael
1955 Le Amiche Uncredited
1955 Desperate Farewell Doctor Lena
1956 La capinera del mulino Aimone
1986 Giovanni Senzapensieri Il Professore (final film role)

References

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from Grokipedia
Alessandro Fersen, born Aleksander Kazimierz Fajrajzen, is a Polish-born Italian dramatist, actor, theater director, author, and drama teacher known for his pioneering role in 20th-century experimental Italian theater. He developed Mnemodrama, an innovative performer training technique that became a cornerstone of his laboratory-based research, influencing approaches to actor preparation through interdisciplinary methods. Born on December 5, 1911, in Łódź, Poland, Fersen relocated to Italy, where he built a multifaceted career spanning stage and screen. He died on October 3, 2001, in Rome. From the 1940s onward, he directed stage adaptations at venues such as the Teatro Stabile in Genoa before establishing his own studio-laboratory in Rome. Between 1957 and 1983, Fersen conducted experiments in performer training at his studio-laboratory in Rome that led to the codification of Mnemodrama—a process that simulates shamanic ritual object manipulation to induce altered states of consciousness and enable performers to draw on autobiographical and archetypal unconscious material. This parashamanic training emphasized psychic development and personal transformation for occidental actors, prioritizing long-term laboratory exploration over public performance. His work integrated theater with anthropology, ethnology, and psychology, distinguishing him as a key post-war experimentalist often compared to figures such as Jerzy Grotowski. In parallel, Fersen appeared as a character actor and contributed as a writer to Italian films during the mid-20th century, including roles in productions such as Ulysses and Le amiche. His legacy endures through the continued practice of Mnemodrama and scholarly attention to his contributions to performer training methodologies.

Early life and education

Birth and family background

Alessandro Fersen, originally named Aleksander Kazimierz Fajrajzen, was born on 5 December 1911 in Łódź, Poland, which was then under Russian control. He was born into an Ashkenazi Jewish family. In 1913, at the age of two, he relocated with his parents to Genoa, Italy, where he spent his childhood and grew up immersed in Italian culture. This move marked the beginning of his lifelong connection to Italy, shaping his early development in a new linguistic and cultural environment.

Philosophical education

Alessandro Fersen pursued his university studies in philosophy at the University of Genoa, where he was a student of the philosopher Giuseppe Rensi. He graduated in 1934. His graduation thesis was subsequently elaborated and published in 1936 under the title L'Universo come giuoco by the Guanda publishing house in Modena. This work marked the culmination of his formal philosophical training and reflected the intellectual environment shaped by Rensi's teaching at the university.

Wartime experiences

Exile and travels

Alessandro Fersen was forced to emigrate from Italy in 1938 due to the racial laws promulgated by the Fascist regime, which persecuted individuals of Jewish descent like him. He relocated to Paris, where he engaged with contemporary theatrical movements, including the influence of the Cartel des quatre, and approached prose theater. From there, he moved to Eastern Europe. He returned to Italy in 1943. Details on specific activities abroad remain limited, with his travels primarily serving as a period of displacement amid rising persecution in Europe.

Resistance activities

Alessandro Fersen joined the anti-fascist partisan resistance in the Liguria region of Italy in 1943, shortly after his return from abroad, affiliating himself with the Italian Socialist Party (PSI). His involvement included underground activities against the Nazi-fascist regime during the Italian Social Republic period. In late 1943, facing heightened risks and persecution, Fersen fled to Switzerland, where he remained in exile until 1945. During this time in Switzerland, he was interned in refugee camps (Losanna and later Trevano near Lugano), met figures such as Emanuele Luzzati and Giorgio Colli, and engaged in cultural initiatives for the Italian refugee community, notably directing a production of Salomone e la regina di Saba by Guido De Benedetti in Losanna in 1944. Following the end of the war in May 1945, he returned to Italy and served as secretary of the Comitato di Liberazione Nazionale (CLN) for Genoa and the Liguria region, proposed by Sandro Pertini. His resistance experience informed this brief transition to political engagement in the immediate post-war period.

Post-war beginnings

Journalism and politics

After the liberation of Italy at the end of World War II, Alessandro Fersen returned to Genoa where he assumed the role of secretary of the National Liberation Committee (CLN) for Liguria in 1945. Sandro Pertini proposed him for the position of CLN secretary for Genoa and the Liguria Region, a responsibility he accepted amid the efforts to rebuild democratic institutions in the region. This political engagement reflected his continued commitment to anti-fascist reconstruction following his wartime resistance experiences. Simultaneously, Fersen worked as a journalist, serving as a collaborator for the Genoa-based newspapers Il Lavoro and Corriere del Popolo. His contributions to these publications addressed the pressing social and political issues of the immediate post-war period in Liguria. In 1947, he gradually shifted his primary focus toward theatrical directing and related activities.

Early directing and collaborations

Alessandro Fersen began his directing career in 1947 with the premiere of Lea Lebowitz, a drama he both authored and directed, adapted from a Hasidic legend. Staged at the Teatro Nuovo in Milan, the production featured a strong Jewish thematic focus and marked his initial engagement with Jewish theater traditions in the post-war period. He co-founded the Teatro Ebraico (or Compagnia del Teatro Ebraico) with Emanuele Luzzati and Vittore Veneziani, through which this debut was presented as part of efforts to promote Jewish cultural expression on stage. His early collaborations with Emanuele Luzzati proved foundational, building on their initial meeting in a Swiss refugee camp in 1943 where they co-authored Salomone e la regina di Saba, later staged in Genoa in 1945. Luzzati served as scenographer for Lea Lebowitz, strengthening their artistic partnership during this formative phase. In 1950, Fersen joined Luzzati and Walter Cantatore to open the cabaret I Nottambuli in Rome's Via Veneto, a short-lived theatrical venue frequented by artists and intellectuals that closed the same year due to economic problems. These early directing projects and partnerships underscored Fersen's commitment to innovative, culturally rooted theater, paving the way for his later long-term collaboration with Luzzati on original works.

Theatrical career

Work at Teatro Stabile di Genova

Alessandro Fersen worked as a director at the Teatro Stabile di Genova, formerly known as the Piccolo Teatro della Città di Genova, from 1952 to 1960. During this period, he staged productions of classic works by William Shakespeare, Luigi Pirandello, Molière, Jean Anouilh, and Lope de Vega. He collaborated with prominent actors including Enrico Maria Salerno, Tino Buazzelli, and Valeria Valeri. His work at the theater also overlapped with the founding of his Studio di Arti Sceniche in 1957. Fersen's productions at the Teatro Stabile included titles such as Molière's Il malato immaginario in 1953 and Anouilh's Colombe in 1954 at the Piccolo Teatro venue, as well as later stagings like Pirandello's Liolà in 1956. These efforts contributed to the theater's repertoire of international classics during his tenure.

Major productions and original works

Alessandro Fersen's later theatrical career was marked by original creations and significant directing projects, many of which reflected his evolving artistic vision and the incorporation of innovative techniques. His original play Le diavolerie. Appunti sull’angoscia premiered at the Festival dei Due Mondi in Spoleto on 10 July 1967, with a subsequent presentation in Polish translation at Warsaw's Teatr Dramatyczny in 1973. Fersen's Golem (1969), inspired by Yiddish folklore, debuted at Florence's Teatro La Pergola on 11 June 1969 and was later broadcast on radio. Leviathan (1974), explicitly drawing on mnemodrama methods, premiered at the Spoleto Festival dei Due Mondi on 29 June 1974 and was also shown at the Jerusalem Festival in 1975. Fersen also made notable contributions to opera direction, including two productions of Il Dibuk (music by Lodovico Rocca, libretto by Renato Simoni, based on S. An-sky): the first at Florence's Teatro Comunale on 21 January 1962 and a new staging at Turin's Teatro Regio on 14 April 1982. He directed other operas at the Maggio Musicale Fiorentino, such as Poulenc's La voce umana paired with Dallapiccola's Il prigioniero in 1969. Between 1962 and 1974, Fersen directed several productions at the Teatro Stabile di Roma, while his original works often appeared at the Spoleto Festival. From 1975 to 1978, he served as artistic director of the Teatro Stabile di Bolzano, where he oversaw stagings including Lope de Vega's Fuenteovejuna (1975), Della Porta's La Fantesca (1976), and a Lorca triptych (1977).

Artistic director roles

Alessandro Fersen served as artistic director of the Teatro Stabile di Bolzano from 1975 to 1978, succeeding Maurizio Scaparro in the role. His tenure focused on balancing experimental research, didactic initiatives, and a varied repertoire to promote wider audience engagement, reflecting his long-standing commitment to laboratory-oriented theater developed at the Studio di Arti Sceniche. He introduced a shift toward experimental languages, opening the theater to innovative and visually suggestive productions that emphasized philological revisions of classics and creative textual interweaving. Among the notable spectacles staged under his direction were the inaugural Leviathan, Fuenteovejuna by Lope de Vega with scenographies by Emanuele Luzzati, La fantesca by Giovan Battista Della Porta (which featured a dramaturgical revision incorporating Commedia dell’Arte elements and was performed successfully in Austria), Leonce e Lena by Georg Büchner with actors Antonio Salines and Carola Stagnaro, a Trittico by Federico García Lorca, and Spudorata verità by Georg Müller. He also commissioned external productions aligned with regional linguistic interests, such as Elektra by Hugo von Hofmannsthal directed by Antonio Taglioni. His leadership marked a period of innovative programming but ended amid significant administrative and political challenges, resulting in the revocation of his directorial position in 1978, although he continued to direct through the close of the 1978–1979 season. No other formal artistic director positions at major Italian theaters are documented in primary or institutional sources for Fersen’s career.

Pedagogy and acting training

Founding of Studio di Arti Sceniche

In 1957, Alessandro Fersen founded the Studio Fersen di Arti Sceniche in Rome as an acting school and experimental laboratory. Initially, training incorporated Konstantin Stanislavski's system as a foundational reference, focusing on structured actor preparation. The studio combined professional training with closed research, later evolving significantly toward ritual and anthropological approaches following Fersen's 1958 immersion in Candomblé in Brazil. The Studio di Arti Sceniche has demonstrated longevity, remaining active for decades and contributing to acting pedagogy in Italy.

Teaching approach and influence

Alessandro Fersen's pedagogical approach at the Studio di Arti Sceniche centered on exploring the "deep latitude" of theater, deliberately distancing training from psychological realism, formal techniques, and ideological frameworks in order to recover the ritual and anthropological origins of theatrical action. This method emphasized long-term laboratory research over production-oriented goals, positioning the actor's body and memory as primary instruments for accessing primal dimensions of performance. His teaching was profoundly interdisciplinary, integrating anthropological studies of archaic rituals, possession dances, and subaltern cults with philosophical reflections on abandon and play, as well as influences from Stanislavski's physical actions and theories of transitional objects. Fersen advocated for a ritual-based theater grounded in parashamanic processes, drawing particularly from his 1958 observations of Candomblé in Brazil, which informed his pursuit of trance-like states, death-rebirth motifs, and collective ecstatic structures as pathways to authentic expression. These principles appeared in his theoretical writings, including Teatro e festa arcaica (1979) and Le origini teatrali della cultura (1985), where he argued for reconnecting contemporary performance with pre-dramatic festive and shamanic behaviors. The core technique in Fersen's pedagogy was mnemodramma (first named in 1961, with gestural and visionary phases codified in the 1970s), developed as a spontaneous, non-textual process that reactivated autobiographical memory to create scenic situations, progressing through phases of ludic play with props to gestural and visionary states without recourse to naturalistic psychology or therapy. This method aimed at truth-seeking through controlled abandon, where actors achieved a "non-ego" condition in tension between surrender and subtle awareness, yielding amplified, archetypal visions drawn from unconscious sources. Fersen's approach left a lasting influence on Italian acting pedagogy by establishing one of the post-war era's most enduring laboratory models, offering an alternative to state conservatories and dominant Stanislavski-derived training. Through its emphasis on mnestic and physical research linked to anthropological and ritual perspectives, it shaped generations of actors, directors, and trainers in independent contexts across Italy.

Acting in film and television

Film roles

Alessandro Fersen appeared in supporting and character roles in various Italian and international films, primarily between the 1940s and 1950s, though his primary career focus remained in theater. His film acting began with an uncredited part in Renato Castellani's Un colpo di pistola (1942). In 1949, he played Il rabbino in The Earth Cries Out. He also appeared in René Clément's Le mura di Malapaga the same year. Fersen took on numerous minor parts during the 1950s in films directed by notable Italian filmmakers including Castellani, Clément, Michelangelo Antonioni, Riccardo Freda, and Mario Camerini. One of his more visible roles was as Diomede in Camerini's Ulysses (1954). His final credited film appearance came decades later as Il Professore in Giovanni Senzapensieri (1986).

Television work

Alessandro Fersen made notable contributions to Italian television through his work with RAI, where he directed and scripted adaptations of commedia dell'arte themes during the late 1950s and early 1960s. These programs aimed to revive the classic Italian theatrical tradition of commedia dell'arte for broadcast audiences, featuring stock characters, improvisation-inspired structures, and masks in new narrative contexts. His key television works include Le fatiche di Arlecchino (1957), Pierrot alla conquista della luna (1957), and Sganarello e la figlia del re (1960), all produced for RAI as part of efforts to popularize commedia dell'arte on the emerging medium of television. These productions emphasized the physicality and comic timing characteristic of the genre, adapting its conventions to the television format while preserving its spirit of popular entertainment. This television activity overlapped with his early pedagogical efforts, as it occurred around the time he established his acting school. No significant acting appearances by Fersen himself in television are documented in major sources.

Innovations in theater

Development of mnemodrama

Alessandro Fersen's development of mnemodrama was significantly shaped by his 1958 tour of South America with the Teatro Stabile di Genova, during which he spent four months in Bahia, Brazil, observing and partially participating in Candomblé initiation and possession rituals. These experiences with controlled trance states, ritual identification, and the performative aspects of possession—such as convulsive movements akin to Dionysian rites—served as a seminal anthropological catalyst for his research into the primordial origins of theater and rituality. Building on psycho-scenic experiments conducted in his Rome studio since 1957, which initially involved manipulating neutral objects under given circumstances, Fersen progressively shifted toward techniques emphasizing total abandonment over rational control. Between 1960 and 1962, after two years of refining the psycho-scenic actor technique, he coined and formalized mnemodrama as the culmination of his "tecniche dell’abbandono" (techniques of abandonment). The method was first presented publicly in 1962 at the Université du Théâtre des Nations in Paris, where Fersen demonstrated its initial spoken form. Fersen defined mnemodrama as "dramma della memoria" (drama of memory), a process that activates not only individual unconscious events but also ancestral and primal (ferina) memory through trance induced by a symbolic object-trigger. Actors achieve a state of complete inner emptiness and receptivity via preparatory relaxation and breathing exercises, leading to profound altered states where conscious control dissolves and the performer encounters hidden psychic dimensions. He emphasized its theatrical essence, noting that trance and identification in primitive rituals are inherently performative, and positioned mnemodrama as a profane simulation of such archaic processes to reach the "nucleo creativo del teatro" (creative nucleus of theater). Distinct from psychodrama, mnemodrama is a non-therapeutic actor-training method for psychically stable performers, prioritizing embodied exploration over verbal narrative or psychological protection. It informed Fersen's later stage work, notably through gestural applications in Leviathan (1974).

Theoretical writings

Alessandro Fersen articulated his theoretical views on theater through books and articles that advocated for a profound renewal of the art form, emphasizing interdisciplinary approaches and an anthropological perspective to uncover deeper truths in performance. His major published work in this area is Il Teatro, Dopo, released by Laterza in 1980. In the book, Fersen examines the future of theater beyond traditional conventions, arguing for a practice that integrates insights from anthropology, psychology, and other disciplines to move beyond mere representation and toward a direct confrontation with human experience and truth. These writings consistently promoted an interdisciplinary framework, viewing theater as a medium for exploring universal human dimensions rather than confined aesthetic or narrative forms. His theoretical output reflects a consistent pursuit of theater as a tool for truth-seeking, laying the conceptual foundation for his innovative practices while maintaining a focus on the intellectual and philosophical underpinnings of performance. The ideas expressed in these texts connect closely to his concept of mnemodrama, serving as the intellectual framework for that technique.

Legacy

Posthumous recognition

Alessandro Fersen died on 3 October 2001 in Rome. In October 2011, on the centenary of his birth, a conference and related events were held in Rome to commemorate his contributions to theater pedagogy, acting training, and dramatic theory. An exhibition dedicated to his work was also presented during this period. His reconstructed studio is preserved at the Museo Biblioteca dell’Attore in Genoa, where memorabilia related to his career are displayed.

Fondazione Alessandro Fersen

The Fondazione Alessandro Fersen was established in 2005 by Ariela Fajrajzen, daughter of Alessandro Fersen, with the primary objective of preserving, studying, and disseminating his theatrical legacy, including his innovative research, writings, and methodologies. The organization focuses on the curation and in-depth exploration of Fersen's body of work, ensuring continued access to his contributions to contemporary theater through activities such as publications, events, workshops, and exhibitions. The foundation plays a key role in archive management, maintaining and promoting materials related to Fersen's career, and is linked to an archive of his works in Genoa. It operates from its seat in Rome at via Salaria 44, where it hosts initiatives to advance the understanding and application of Fersen's theories and practices. Through these efforts, the Fondazione Alessandro Fersen actively safeguards his influence on the performing arts for future generations.

References

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