Friday the 13th
Friday the 13th. A darkly funny play about luck, guilt, and coincidence, Friday the 13th balances laughter and discomfort with the precision of black vaudeville, exposing the comic cruelty of fate.
Friday the 13th. A darkly funny play about luck, guilt, and coincidence, Friday the 13th balances laughter and discomfort with the precision of black vaudeville, exposing the comic cruelty of fate.
Déjà vu. Two strangers — a man and a woman who seem to have never met — encounter each other on the terrace of a luxury Swiss hotel, each awaiting their own scheduled assisted suicide the next morning. What begins as a hesitant flirtation quickly takes an unexpected turn. In the second scene, both characters are propelled into a parallel, dystopian world: they reappear inside the modest living room of an outdated, utterly ordinary couple they are apparently meant to replace.
What remains of love, of identity, of self — when memory has been erased?
Him and Her – Interactive Monologue unfolds through fifteen autonomous yet interconnected vignettes that trace the evolution of a contemporary couple facing the small and not-so-small tremors of everyday life. Each scene captures a fleeting moment: waiting in a theatre, a low-cost wedding night, a sofa crisis, a broken TV, petty arguments, existential doubts, trivial jealousies, worries about their child, nostalgia, sexuality, ageing, and the dizzying excesses of modern consumption. Blending wry humour, fragile tenderness and flashes of absurdity, the play reveals how two people build — and sometimes endure — a shared life. The minimal set, the brevity of the scenes and the precision of the dialogue transform these fragments into an intimate, funny and profoundly human portrait of a couple trying, not always successfully, to stay together.