The theater was founded by the drama section of the German Department in 1984.[3][6]
Its primary mission is to give opportunities to students for training and hands-on experience in a theater.[7]
The theater evolved to the largest student theater in Germany.[1]
It has become one of the largest of its kind across Europe.[8]
Venue
The former operating room has two opposing straight elongated stands, east and west.
The rows of benches rise very steeply, allowing an unobstructed view.
The northern face of the building has a large window, that is usually covered with a black sheet of molton.
The southern gallery may be used for additional seats.
This arrangement then virtually creates a thrust stage.
There is no glass dome separating observers from the scene.
Unlike during an operation focused on one spot in the middle of the hall, actors can – and do – use the whole width and length of the stage.
This, combined with the bench structure, tend to give the theater an intimate atmosphere.[4]
A separate staircase for the audience has been attached to the building's southwest.
While the stage level can be reached via an elevator, the gallery can not.
Nonetheless, the crew is determined to find means allowing everyone to attend shows.[9]
A dressing room, a make-up room and a workshop, beside other facilities, are located laterally to the stage, underneath the stands and gallery.
Below the main stage, the former ER's operating room serves the ThOP as a rehearsal stage.[7]
Some productions used it as a stage for public audience, too.[7][4][10]
However, the former barrel vault-like operating room is limited to 30 persons.[4]
Yet it is accessible by wheelchair via ramps, as it is slightly below street level.
Properties and costumes are stored in the attic of an adjacent building, if they are not in use in current or upcoming productions.
From October 2014 till March 2016 a damage of the roof forced the ThOP to use other irregular venues.[11]
Unfortunately this coincided with the 30-year anniversary of the theater.[12][11]
Alternative venues were for example a (secondary) stage at the city theater Deutsches Theater, as well as the stage of the Junges Theater, but also non-theater surroundings such as the assembly hall at the former grounds of the local private university, now also property of the Georg-August-university, and the ThOP's own rehearsal stage the former ER's OR.[7][10]
In the course of building repairs a ventilation system has been built in into the ThOP's own attic.
It helps managing excess heat emitted by a full house and lighting.
Operations
Productions are shown en suite.
One ensemble "moves in" into the ThOP, sets up the stage setting and performs final rehearsals, and then has public performances usually over the course of two weeks, until they "move out" again yielding the stage to the next ensemble.
This cycle allows up to 12 productions to premiere per year,[5] totaling about 130 shows.[13]
Casts and crews are predominantly students, but a sizable number of the participants are university staff and towns-people as well.[3]
Enrolled university students can obtain credits in some courses of studies.[3]
Directors have to go through a vetting process, by being an Assistant Director for one production at the ThOP first.
The remaining tasks have more or less formal requirements, but there is a culture of passing forward skills and knowledge:
Senior ThOP affiliates instruct novices, who themselves may eventually become senior ThOP members too.
There is only one position funded by the department, accompanied by some (student) assistants.[3][1]
All participants are otherwise volunteers.[3][1]
The admission pricing policy is non-profit, nonetheless subsidies and sponsoring[14] support the budget.[4][2]
Enrolled students of the Georg-August-Universität can attend shows for a compulsory flatrate.[9][15][2]
A bar serving bottled drinks belongs to the theater's services.
Most plays are in German.
The "English drama workshop" stages a play in English once per year.[16]
There have been productions incorporating German sign language, too.
There is no limit to the range of genres.
Classical plays as well as contemporary dramas are shown.[1]
Since 2004 the theater also hosts a budding dramatists competition.[17][18]
The eventually winning play is guaranteed to have its world premiere in the ThOP.[19][18]
Due to the coronavirus pandemic the theater temporarily shut down its operations mid March 2020, like virtually all theaters in Germany.
All productions were put on hold and will be shown as soon as rehearsals become possible again.
Nonetheless, ThOP-related classes were still held, although predominately via distance teaching.
References
^ abcdeEilts, Hilke; Schuette, Susann (May 4, 2011). "Hinter den Kulissen des ThOP" [behind the scenes of the ThOP]. Litlog (in German). Retrieved April 26, 2019.