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Vitalik Havryla

Currently in cast

Pan Tadeusz

The Juliusz Słowacki Theatre in Krakow - The Grand Stage

Nearest dates

November
Wed 05 11:00
November
Wed 05 18:00
Sold out
Ticket to the theater
November
Thu 06 18:00
November
Fri 07 18:00
November
Sat 08 16:00
Sold out
Ticket to the theater
January
Wed 07 18:00
January
Thu 08 11:00
Phone reservation
12 424 45 25 /12 424 45 28/pn.pt 10-16
January
Thu 08 18:00
January
Fri 09 18:00
January
Sat 10 15:00
February
Wed 04 18:00
February
Thu 05 18:00

: Wojtek Klemm

Premiere: 10.10.2025

The Juliusz Słowacki Theatre in Krakow - The Grand Stage

Nearest dates

November
Wed 05 11:00
November
Wed 05 18:00
Sold out
Ticket to the theater
November
Thu 06 18:00
November
Fri 07 18:00
November
Sat 08 16:00
Sold out
Ticket to the theater
January
Wed 07 18:00
January
Thu 08 11:00
Phone reservation
12 424 45 25 /12 424 45 28/pn.pt 10-16
January
Thu 08 18:00
January
Fri 09 18:00
January
Sat 10 15:00
February
Wed 04 18:00
February
Thu 05 18:00

We all know the first lines of the invocation opening ‘Pan Tadeusz’. Lithuania is Adam Mickiewicz's homeland, which the poet lost just like one would lose their health. In recalling Lithuania, the first thing that springs to the poet's mind are its beautiful farmlands. But is he at all concerned with the stories of the people who cultivated those fields? ‘Pan Tadeusz’ is clearly focused on the story of the nobility, as its title suggests; after all, it tells the story of the last nobleman's foray. The national epic seems to completely ignore the rest of the world. So who is it written for? What do we, as contemporaries, actually have in common with the story of incessantly bickering nobles; a story that ends with the contractual marriage of a fourteen-year-old girl to the titular ‘Pan’? What does this story really teach us today? And what is it actually about? Are we supposed to admire it or hate it?