Experimental performance by V.V. Landsberg's mythological post-war fairy tale "The Serpent Queen" to commemorate the 80th anniversary of the beginning of the guerrilla war in Lithuania. The performance intertwines the folkloric myth of Eglė the Serpent Queen with the historical experiences of Lithuanian seaside inhabitants and participants of the partisan war in 1945-1956. The historical reality permeated by mythology gives meaning to the idea of national identity and current affairs. The plot is based on the story of love and sacrifice written in Eglė's diary, which is interspersed with prose, poetic texts, dream records and letters of correspondence. Myth, dream, reality, history and the present intertwine and become a solid bridge, symbolised by the unconventional spatial solutions of the performance, marking the connection between the subconscious and the conscious, nature and man, the past and the present, paganism and Christianity, the temporary and the eternal. In the performance, actress Eglė Jackaitė professionally reveals the transformation of Eglė, the mature wife of a partisan, her patriotism, respect and devotion to her beloved and his choice to fight for the Motherland. Eglė's role reveals the true meaning of the word "herself" - left alone on the island of Gotland (Sweden), she creates a family sanctuary with her own hands, with her emotional and creative strength, gives birth and raises her children, and writes a story of survival of a woman in a difficult time that she can only entrust to her heart or to the fire.