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Lina

24 October | 20:30 – Bulandra Theatre, „Toma Caragiu” Hall

25 October | 19:00 – Bulandra Theatre, „Toma Caragiu” Hall

The performance Lina tells the story of a public shaming, a so-called local electoral ‘sexgate’ that captivated the 1990s.

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By: Alexandra Felseghi  

Cast:

Carolina Sava (Lina), a student: Mădălina Mușat

Ruxandra Mănescu, her friend: Oana Jipa

Anca Ipate, a student: Anca Pitaru

Eduard (Edi) Bărbulescu, student: Iulian Trăistaru

Maestro Brătescu, their professor: Sergiu Aliuș

Octav Miculescu, Brătescu’s assistant: Ion Fiscuteanu Jr.

Romulus Chiriac, senator: Sebastian Marina

Cora Chiriac, his wife: Camelia Paraschiv

Florin Tabac, journalist: Costi Apostol

Daniela Sava, Lina’s mother: Ioana Alexandrina Costea

Anghel Sava, Lina’s father: Daniel Rizea

Ana Mănescu, Ruxandra’s mother: Mona Codreanu

Ligia, floor manager: Lidia Baciu

Directed by: Adina Lazăr 

Set design: Bianca and Sabina Veșteman

Sound design: Adrian Piciorea

Produced by: „Andrei Mureșanu” Theatre, Sfântu-Gheorghe 

Recommended age: 16+

Duration: 2h 40min (no interval)

In Romanian with English and Hungarian surtitles

Our performance, Lina, is inspired by real events without aiming to reenact them. It tells the story of a public shaming, a so-called local electoral ‘sexgate’ that captivated the 1990s. The performance focuses on a slice of life of innocent people who end up being used as pawns in major political games, becoming victims of media lynching.

This production is the third part of the Injustice Trilogy, written by playwright Alexandra Felseghi and directed by Adina Lazăr, completing a panoramic view of Romanian society by addressing real and recognizable events for the audience, presented through the lens of fiction.

The audience is presented with a cascade of events converging toward the central idea of the performance: that life is entirely dependent on the context in which we live, that there is a Great History shaping our own course in one way or another, but once every five years, we have the chance to improve this History. (Alexandra Felseghi and Adina Lazăr)

Photos: Volker Vornehm