Zorica Jevremović Explained

Zorica Jevremović
Birth Name:Zorica Jevremović
Birth Date:1948 8, df=y
Death Place:Belgrade, Serbia
Occupation:Theatre and video director, playwright, theorist, literary historian
Years Active:1968–2023
Spouse:Ranko Munitić (1943–2009)

Zorica Jevremović (Jevremović-Munitić; pronounced as /sr/; 22August 19485October 2023) was a Serbian theatre and video director, playwright, choreographer, intermedia theorist, literary historian and feminist.[1] Her work also included that of a dramaturge in alternative and informal theatrical and film groups.[2]

Jevremović was director of the Belgrade Centre for Media "Ranko Munitić" and the editor of a regional journal for media and culture Mediantrop.[3]

Her husband was a prominent Yugoslav cultural worker and media theorist Ranko Munitić.

Biography

Jevremović Munitić was born in post-war circumstances in Ražanj, but she was raised and grew up in Belgrade.

Jevremović met Ranko Munitić at the amateur film festival "Mala Pula", on 24 June 1968. The two of them married in Belgrade on 1 May 1971, where Zorica added the surname Munitić to hers, and then they went to Zagreb. In November of the same year, they returned to Belgrade, where they lived together until the end of March 2009 (when Munitić died).

Jevremović obtained her dramaturgy degree in 1975 at the Faculty of Dramatic Arts in Belgrade.

As an advocate of a common Yugoslav cultural milieu she had undertaken research into the cultural history and theological common law in multinational and multiconfessional regions of Croatia, Slovenia and Kosovo within former Yugoslavia: Dubrovnik (1976–1980), Perast (1981), Dečani (1985–1989), Tacen (1982–1985), Povlja (1985), Poljica (1986–1990), Zjum (1990).

Jevremović was active as a dramaturge in the following key alternative and informal theatre and film groups in former Yugoslavia: KPGT (1980–1990), Art-film (1981–1983), Nova osećajnost (1984–1985), Preduzeće za pozorišne poslove (1992).

Jevremović edited the following alternative research collections focused on literary history and published in “Književnost” journal: Sava Mrkalj (1984), St. Sava and Hilandar (1988), Vatroslav Jagić (1990).

Jevremović also founded alternative theatres that operated as 'neighbourhood theatres' in ghettoized communities, in places with no previous history of theatre performances:

1985: "Performative Children's Street Theater" („Performativno ulično dečije pozorište”) in Skadarlija, the bohemian artists' venue teeming with restaurants in downtown Belgrade. The core of the troupe was made up of Romani children who lived in Skadarlija, 'white' children' from Dorćol (a nearby prestigious Belgrade neighbourhood), Romani children from the favelas of the Belgrade suburb of Mirijevo (who sell flowers in Skadarlija stolen in city cemeteries), professional actors and painters who live in Skadarlija, a Skadarlija fortune-teller, clowns, fire eaters, and alternative artists (musicians, painters).

1993–1995: "Pocket Theatre M" („Džepno pozorište M”) on the premises of the "Dr Laza Lazarevic" Psychiatric Clinic. The core of this troupe was made up of convalescents, children from the vicinity of the hospital, professional actors, children of the hospital therapists and psychiatrists, film and television amateur actors, psychologists, models, public figures, and blind persons.

1997–1999: "WAY 5a" („PUT 5a”), Feminist theatre in an apartment occupied by Autonomous Women's Center Against Sexual Violence. The core of this troupe was made up of women who came to the Center for Help, Center activists, ballet dancers, painters, women who lived in the same building, women in wheelchairs, composers, students of Women’s Studies, and women refugees.

Zorica Jevremović had worked with marginal groups: Romani children, nuns, psychotics, disabled, blind persons, women who have suffered violence, parentless children, lesbians and women refugees.

At the beginning of the 1990s wars in former Yugoslavia, she was an active member of two anti-war groups: “Civilni pokret otpora” (The Civil Movement for Peace) and “Beogradski krug” (Belgrade Circle), in the framework of which she undertook a number of social-cultural projects.

Jevremović also published books on multimedia theory and applied theatre and several books of plays. Her video works have been shown at the following festivals: “Video Medeja” in Novi Sad, Serbia; Superfest International Disability Film Festival in San Francisco, US; “Alternative - festival film/video” in Belgrade, Serbia, “Bitef polifonija” and the Serbian TV RTS programme “Trezor”, as well as numerous university centres around the world.

Jevremović was a member of the Union of Performing Artists of Serbia from 1978. From 2007, she was also a Serbian Writers’ Society member.

Zorica Jevremović died on 5 October 2023, at the age of 75.

Selected works

Books
Theatrical plays
Essays and Studies in periodicals
Editing of scientific collections
Video works

See also

Literature

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.czkd.org/czkd-arhiva/programi.php?id=251&lang=sr „Zorica Jevremović: Kopile (1948-1968), drama utopije“
  2. https://nova.rs/kultura/posle-duze-bolesti-preminula-zorica-jevremovic-munitic/ "Preminula Zorica Jevremović Munitić"
  3. http://www.mediantrop.rankomunitic.org/index.php/urednistvo/glavna-urednica „Editor-in-chief“
  4. http://www.rts.rs/page/rts/ci/%D0%98%D0%B7%D0%B4%D0%B0%D0%B2%D0%B0%D1%88%D1%82%D0%B2%D0%BE/story/2313/e-knjiga/2094264/dupli-pas.html „Dupli pas“
  5. Matijević, Ivana. "Predstavljena knjiga 'Tišina, pomrlice'", Danas, Beograd, 18. december 2017.