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Dimitris Lignadis is undoubtedly the face of the day. The dismissal of the former artistic director of the National Theater, the accusations of serial rape, his arrest and imprisonment until the trial, have been in the news in recent days.
He has been described as extremely smart, charismatic, overly ambitious, arrogant, a man who experienced a prolonged adolescence and, more recently, one who committed insults.
“I have a lot of darkness and fortunately the theater allows me to bring light out of my darkness. “The light doesn’t come out of the light,” Dimitris Lignadis said in a full interview with Bovary two years ago.
A key role in shaping his character seems to have his father:
Tassos Lignadis was a difficult man. Those who had the great opportunity to enjoy their lesson as their students understood that behind their intelligence and education was hidden a mind that tormented knowledge.
The name “heavy”
He, the philologist, the teacher, the writer, the man of the theater, the student of ancient drama, the theater critic in the great newspapers, was, according to his students, at the same time the god in the classroom but also very difficult ( Inaccessible).
His father, Dimitris Lignadis, influenced the direction of the National Theater for decades as a teacher and executive, while for long periods he held important positions in State Television. The surname “Lignadis”, in the 60s, 70s and 80s, had enormous power, which, as they say, opened and closed “doors”.
Tassos Lignadis was born in Athens in 1926.
During his adolescence he lived through the German occupation as a member of the ESAS Resistance Organization and at the same time actively participated in the illegal press as a columnist in the Student Letters and Youth Voice magazines.
With the Liberation he enrolled in the Faculty of Philosophy of the University of Athens, where he participated in the student movement as a founding member of DESPA (Government Committee of the University Association) and president of PEKE (Cyprus Pan-Student Committee). Lucha) and received a doctorate in 1970. First Independence Loan “.
In 1955 he was appointed professor at the Moraitis School and in 1963 he was elected professor at the Faculty of Philosophy at the University of Athens, a position he resigned during the April dictatorship. He also worked at the Aidonopoulos School, Pierce College, and the Lyceum of JM Panagiotopoulos.
During his time at the Moraitis School, he organized theatrical performances, while during the Metapolitan period he was appointed artistic director of the National Theater, a position he held until 1980. At the National Theater he also worked as a teacher at the theater school.
Starting in 1977 he worked at ERT as a program consultant with responsibilities in the field of educational programs, however he interrupted his cooperation due to ideological disagreements. He first appeared in letters in 1955 from the pages of the magazine of the Society for the Study of Greek Culture Neon Athinaion, where he published many studies until 1963. He also contributed to many magazines and newspapers.
“Strict teacher”
He had two sons, Dimitris and Giannis, and from an early age he introduced them to books, the tragic, the value of language, and higher education. He closely monitored the progress of his children, who were attending the school where he worked. In this school he had also met his wife and the mother of his children. She was a secretary. As a parent, he demanded academic distinction, excellence, at the same time introducing children from an early age to a strictly structured everyday life.
Dimitris Lignadis recalls that: “I watched theater from an early age, our father took us with him – he wrote a review. From the age of nine I started going to Epidaurus, every year. There I loved it for the first time. I saw” Oedipus the Tyrant “with Minotis. A mental kick είχα that I never imagined would play. We in Epidaurus spend summers, cycling, in groups.”
Tassos Lignadis’ personal life was also complicated and contradictory, leaving a thick shadow over his two sons at a very tender age. The children grew up with their mother. Lignadis himself had stated in his interview with Bovary:
“He did not belong to a typical family, dad, mom, who go out together. From the beginning we realized that there were clouds in our father’s relationship with our mother. Luckily I had my mother’s brother who took us on many trips and I continue to visit Greece.
I always remember with my brother that we were afraid, because my father lived with us, but apart from my mother, our mother was not supposed to leave either. I remember that fear. “
“… They would pass me off as my father”
As it turned out, neither the theater nor the study of great texts from ancient Greek literature and the new intellect managed to overcome the obscurity of his son Dimitris.
His son, Dimitris, describes his decision to become an actor as follows:
“I entered the Faculty of Philosophy, believing that I would become a philologist. Anyway I liked it. And while I was at the University that September, as I was passing by outside the National Drama School, I said to my father “should I take an exam?” “Do what you want,” he said, “but you won’t get it.”
I gave a monologue that I had read at a school event and another by Durenmat that I had played at school, by chance. I imagine I was decent and would be overlooked by my father, he taught at school. It had to be too big of a cucumber to not be overlooked.
The brand, to tell the truth, opens the doors more easily, but the question is how long you will stay in the room. I had never thought of becoming an actor. When he entered school he had it as a hobby. He took me as an excellent player after the Nacional and there I played for ten years, many roles as an accomplice, and well… ”.
“My father c .. his life and his health for love”
In a 2017 interview with DownTown magazine, Dimitris Lignadis had said, among other things, “He who goes to the light of love and lets him know that he will burn, this is the real Che Guevara.” If you ask me, I would like to be a Che Guevara of love.
Q: Have you ever met someone like that? My father (ss Tassos Lignadis). Γ @ μ @ γε his life and health for love. These few minutes of joy when two bodies or two glances meet can make you smile. years of life. In my opinion, of course, not in the g @ m @ ne. They fertilize them. It is the same act but if there is fertilization something comes out ”.
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