What do a Renaissance beauty, a writer with a headscarf and a Soviet heroine have in common? The three of them, having invited a group of friends, rush onto the stage to tell everyone what it means to be a woman in Lithuania. In a country where the "Men Only" magazine still mocks emancipation, where the interwar organized fashion court and a woman's love for a woman was best pretending to be a man, where one of the first women in Europe was given the right to vote, where the seeds of feminist light still struggle to take root and bloom, and actresses still the most necessary to play young lovers or their mothers.
Alongside Asta, Ieva, Marija, Rugilė and Vaiva, Barbora, Bona, Dalia, Julija, Marytė and Teklė, who have earned a place in Lithuanian history, will appear on the stage. They will tell you what the current young Lithuanian women are like and what tradition gave birth to them. We will remember how unfriendly the history of Lithuania can be for women: there is not much room for them here, and all those who managed to break into it did not do without the help of male power or great beauty. But what if you want to be a part of your country's history, even though you're neither exceptionally beautiful nor terribly powerful? Maybe burn this representation of women and after performing the witch dance start creating a new tradition with your work?
With the help of music, the audience of the performance-concert "Lithuanian Women" will be transported to different historical periods and different stages of a woman's life by stories based on real facts and fictional stories. Sincere excitement will be replaced by funny stories, and them by bitter irony. Things that shouldn't be said will be said and things that aren't necessarily funny will be laughed at. So that blossoming primroses adorn the proud heads of women, men and everyone in between.