"Bertold Brecht's Town Wedding" (that's the actual title of the play) talks about the moral duplicity of society. Basically, everything revolves around the revealed pre-wedding loss of virginity of the bride. We talk more in the show. Not only about two-faced morality and chastity, but also about the disintegration of customs, the absurd deformation of what were once the most sacred things in human existence: weddings, funerals, the senses of the cosmogonic cycle and traditions of celebration.
Of course, the extremely Lithuanian specifics are also opened up. This is the disorder of a country person coming to live in the city, even the inability to become a so-called urbanite and, of course, a complete lack of understanding of the processes of globalization that influence him in one way or another. Of course, first of all, this is a good comedy, like a mirror turned on us or our loved ones. Here we can really laugh, if not at ourselves, then at least at our neighbor, and it is this tradition that is immortal with us. Any kind of laughter is good, as long as it does not come from anger.
The performance is extremely open, with a lot of improvisation. The latest social and political current events are constantly included in it, so it is constantly changing. The performance is open to the audience. So, it never repeats itself and is different every time. So if you like this dionysia with Lithuanian white blend, you can safely go again and again."