There are some stereotypes in relationships between men and women. They are difficult to explain with reason. Why is it possible for a man to love and pursue a woman, but for a woman to behave in a way that is indecent? Why would a man with dozens of women be gently called a 'bobby' at worst, and a woman with the same list be called a whore? Does monogamy go against a man's biological nature? Does man's biological essence contradict the social norms of behaviour that surround him?...
These and similar reflections have contributed to the emergence of "Easy Dating".
It is a funny and at the same time sad story about how ... A man and a woman meet in an empty hotel restaurant. But this time it is the woman who initiates the acquaintance. Who is she and what does she want from a stranger? The verbal duel between these characters reflects their mutual attraction and hostility, their loneliness and their desire to overcome it, their longing for love and their fear.
Valentin Krasnogorov (Valentin Fainburg) is a Russian playwright and writer, Israeli political activist (born 1934). He became interested in playwriting in 1969. His plays "The Bride's Room", "Someone Has to Go Out", "Chivalrous Passions", "The Pleasures of Infidelity", "Love to Unconsciousness", "Everybody Has a Star of Their Own", "Today or Never", "Let's Make Love!", "Wednesday's Date", "His List of Don Juan", and others have been produced in more than 300 theatres in Russia and abroad, and have been well received by the critics and the audience. The performances based on Krasnogorov's works have been directed by such famous directors as Georgy Tovstonogov, Lev Dodin, Roman Viktyuk and Vladimir Andreev. Krasnogorov is also known as a prose writer and journalist, author of numerous books, short stories, short stories and essays
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