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Revision as of 15:12, 6 May 2014

Teya Sugareva (born 5 December 1989 in Sofia, Bulgaria) is a Bulgarian poet[1] and drama theatre director.

Sugareva started writing poetry in 2006. During that same year, she won her first poetry awards from the National poetic competition, Petya Dubarova, in Burgas and the special prize of the poetiс fest, Resurrection 2006, in Dobrich.[citation needed] She graduated NGDEK and NATFA. Teya Sugareva graduated "Directing for Theatre" in the class of Prof. Snezhina Tankovska. Member of the Academic Council and PR "Performing Arts" in the Student Council. Now she is assisting her professor in NATFA. She is a director of several plays:

  • "Dead Souls" (Мъртви души) written by Nikolai Gogol and adapted for stage by Mikhail Bulgakov.[2] (Stage version and direction - Teya Sugareva; set design and costumes - Carolina Dalkalacheva and Radostina Todorova; soundtrack - George Strezov; Cast - Jordan Rasin, Hristo Ushev, Dejan Tsvyatkov, Stefan Dimitrov, Nikola Parashkevov, Denitsa Petkova, Yonko Dimitrov, Anton Grigorov, Borislava Stratieva, Mariana Boneva, Bozidar Matanov)
  • "Walled in ones" (Зазиданите) written by Yassen Vassilev[3] (Author: Yassen Vassilev; Director: Teya Sugareva; Set and Costumes: Carolina Dalkalacheva; Music: George Strezov; Cast: Jordan Rasin, Denitsa Petkova, Jana Bobeva, Hristo Ushev. Plot: A writer moves to a house in the country to stop writing and start his life over. A series of strange coincidences remind him of the past, which he is trying to escape. He understands that the mysterious place where he fell, has its own laws that must be obeyed. Mysteries rapidly obsess his imagination and soon he crosses the line between fiction and reality.)
  • "WelKome America!" by Matei Visniec, produced by "Sofia" theatre ; Director: Teya Sugareva; Set and Costumes: Radostina Todorova; Music: Georgi Strezov; Cast: Yordan Rasin, Denitsa Darinova, Hristo Ushev, Stefan Dimitrov, Dosi Dosev.[4]
  • "Robin" (Робин) by Anna Topaldjikova, produced by "Antract" and "Vazrajdane" theatre; Director: Teya Sugareva; Set and Costumes: Radostina Todorova; music: Alexander Kostov; Cast: Leonid Yovchev, Hristo Ushev, Martin Smochevski, Slav Boichev, Yana Bobeva, Denitsa Darinova.[5]

References

  1. ^ World and Its Peoples. Marshall Cavendish. September 2009. pp. 1492–. ISBN 978-0-7614-7902-4. Retrieved 29 March 2011.
  2. ^ [1]
  3. ^ [2]
  4. ^ [3]
  5. ^ [4]

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