The script utilises the poem by Aleksandra Karpiuk Ja tam stoję and the text by Małgorzata Lempart, a high-school student from Wałbrzych.
Tomek Tryzna's novel entitled Miss Nobody was published in 1994 and would become one of the biggest and most famous literary events of those times, equally for the readers, the media and the literary critics. It gained an enthusiastic review by Czesław Miłosz, who wrote: „The first truly post-modernist Polish novel.
The author scorns his readers, especially those under forty, by letting them feel superior to the immature creatures' flouncing about and babbling, only to put the assured ones suddenly into the state of uncertainty: but that's us, our world-view, even if it's been childishly simplified, it's still the same and there's no other beliefs in sight". The novel was adapted for film in 1996 by Andrzej Wajda.
The script utilises the poem by Aleksandra Karpiuk Ja tam stoję and the text by Małgorzata Lempart, a high-school student from Wałbrzych.Learn more at https://www.wteatrw.pl/pl/index.php?id=10&idd=24.
script Artur Pałyga
scenography Zuzanna Srebrna
costumes Elbruzda
music Łukasz Wójcik*
lighting Katarzyna Łuszczyk
video projections Maria Porzyc | Agnieszka Waszczeniuk
stage manager Elżbieta Kozak
assistant directors Elżbieta Kozak | Krzysztof Boczkowski | Anna Wolszczak [PWST Wrocław] | Filip Jaśkiewicz [Uniwersytet Wrocławski]
* [Królestwo Umarłych Godzin Justyna Antoniak | Łukasz Wójcik. Violin part
Marysia | Queen Katarzyna Pietruska
Kasia Aleksandra Karpiuk
Eva Milena Staszuk
Nobody | Tall Man | The Four-eyes Krzysztof Boczkowski
Brother | Pimpuś | Astrologer | One of Men Maciej Kowalczyk
Granny | Woman Beata Rakowska
Nag | Klaudia Jolanta Solarz-Szwed
Sister | Zosia | Magda Maria Kania
Form teacher Ewelina Paszke-Lowitzsch
School counselor | Mirror | Sun | Bloke | Ambassador Jerzy Senator
Tadziu | Kawczak | Prince Marcin Łuczak
Dżigi Przemysław Kozłowski
Videos