Rhinos are already in your city! Join the progress!
How fast they are. Strong. Monumental! Undoubted. Logical. How about you? You don't exist because you don't think. Start thinking and it will appear. It's more than an invitation. Turn into a rhinoceros! Just look how beautifully they dance! Singing and dancing!
They may have been a minority in the beginning, but now they are definitely not. There are more and more of them. You will also find your own people there. Your coworkers and neighbors. All the elite are there. Your manager, the mayor, the most important influencers. It is easy to criticize from the side, but the truth can only be seen from the inside, only when connected. After all, you see what is happening - reality changes before your eyes. After many crises, the world has changed beyond recognition. Keep up with the times.
So what will be your choice? Will you continue to sit in the cafe? Another little one? Or will you join? But will you succeed? Will you be the last man in your town?
***
On a quiet Sunday afternoon, a cafe located in the square of a typical French provincial town gathers representatives of various social circles. They talk about their lives and about politics. Those discussions help to understand the problems not only of France, but also of Europe as a whole. In the space of the cafe, characters not only gather, but also move away from each other. Unexpectedly, rhinoceroses appear in the town and destroy normal life, and the hallucination becomes a provocation.
"Rhinoceros" is one of the most famous plays of Romanian-born French playwright Eugène Ionesco and one of the most popular plays of the 20th century. comedies. Despite the many features characteristic of the theater of the absurd, as well as the work of the playwright, "Rhinoceros" is considered one of the most unusual works of E. Ionesco. The play depicts the gradual transformation of humanity into rhinoceroses, thus metaphorically conveying the collapse of personality, the human desire to be the same as everyone else, to merge with the mass. The playwright focuses on the individual and his place in society, the longing for meaning deeply rooted in man.