The mystery of education, science, culture and health**, educational drama, comedy, tragedy, therapy and Wikipedia*** and other absurdities**** in the performance "Lesson". Based on the play of the same name by French playwright Eugene Ionesco.
The show is a "Lesson" for those who want to know what chalk was (and still is) eaten with. Without respite and break... The length of the "lesson" will depend on the student's knowledge, skills, willingness or unwillingness to learn and the mood and patience of the teacher, which will depend on the student's knowledge, skills, willingness or unwillingness to learn, and the teacher ...
And that "Lesson" promises to be fun, playful, interesting and useful - that can be expected, three very original, interesting actors from different generations will meet on stage: Taura Kvietinskaitė (Student); the expressive actor Audronis Rūkas (Standing Staff) and the director of the play, Rolandas Kazlas, who is creating the role of a teacher, who always manages and knows how to pleasantly surprise. Neringa Keršulytė is the head of the art club, living corner and costume designer.
Romanian-born French playwright Eugene Ionesco (1909-1994) is considered one of the pioneers of absurd drama and one of the most significant of the 20th century. playwrights. His most prominent examples of absurdist drama are the tragicomedy The Bald Singer (La Cantatrice chauve, 1950), The Lesson (La Leçon, 1951), as well as Les Chaises (1952) and The Rhinoceroses (Rhinocéros, 1959). One-act dramas are full of illogical situations, clichéd, hyperbolically polite dialogues. By ridiculing banality, the absurdity of human existence is shown. The playwright himself called them "anti-plays".