Tale of the Snake’s Heart

Tuesday, February 10, 2026, 7:00 PM

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  • Tuesday, February 10, 2026, 7:00 PM
  • Wednesday, February 11, 2026, 7:00 PM
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31.10 and 2.11 the play will be performed with English surtitles.

This play is based on “Tale of the Snake’s Heart: Another Word about Jakób Szela” by Radek Rak, a novel which received the Nike literary award for 2020.

Some Jewish scholars have said that every night the world is disassembled and put back together by a mysterious demiurge. But because, like anyone, he can make mistakes, the new world may resemble the previous one, but is always a bit different, some things move around in a peculiar way. It can also sometimes happen that this or that part of the world gets mislaid somewhere and vanishes. That is why there is no order, structure, or purpose in the world, because every attempt at order, structure, or purpose is mere illusion.

A travelling troupe of rural actors is trying to put the world together by telling the story of Jakób Szela. Jakób, a lunk who has lost his heart and his identity, longs to be a lord. Yet because the world’s balance must be maintained, lord and lunk change places—or at least each of them latches onto a particle of the other’s identity. A fairy-tale, after all, is governed by its own laws, mixing truth, supposition, lies, and fiction, which may just turn out to be a higher form of truth.

This play is based on “Tale of the Snake’s Heart: Another Word about Jakób Szela” by Radek Rak, a novel which received the Nike literary award for 2020. The artists’ point of departure was the notion of identity, whether of the personal sort, in which the desire to make a change in the world is always at the cost of changing oneself, or the societal sort, in which our past as peasants and nobility blend, or the political sort, in which the complex events of the peasant uprising show the tragic weave of class ressentiment, the history of abuses, and a longing for revenge, which turns any hope for a Polish independence uprising that supersedes class into a bloody slaughter of the nobility.

Cast

  • Magda Grąziowska
  • Paulina Kondrak
  • Zbigniew W. Kaleta
  • Grzegorz Mielczarek
  • Beata Paluch
  • Łukasz Stawarczyk
  • Łukasz Szczepanowski

Creators

  • Beniamin M. Bukowski Director
  • Beniamin M. Bukowski, Amadeusz Nosal Script/dramaturgy
  • Aleksandra Żurawska Scenography
  • Julia Ulman Costumes
  • Anna Stela Composition
  • Katarzyna Witek Choreography
  • Amadeusz Nosal Video
  • Julia Mazur Assistant costume designer
  • Maja Wisła-Szopińska Assistant director
  • Zbigniew S. Kaleta Stage manager/prompter

Stary National Theatre

ul. Jagiellońska 1

Stary National Theatre is one of the oldest theatres in Poland. Its contemporary repertoire consists of both contemporary works and reinterpretations of classics.

The theatre, which found its home in a historical building on a corner of Szczepański Square, is one of Poland’s national stages, directly managed by the Minister of Culture. In the 19th century, its stage was graced by the theatre’s current patron, a consummate actress, Helena Modrzejewska, known to the English-speaking world as Modjeska. A great many eminent artists trod the legendary boards of the Stary after the war, notably Tadeusz Kantor, Jerzy Grotowski, Zygmunt Hübner, and Krystian Lupa. The stagings of Adam Mickiewicz’s The Forefathers’ Eve directed by Konrad Swinarski and of Fyodor Dostoyevsky’s The Possessed directed by Andrzej Wajda made history. The contemporary repertoire of the theatre consists both of current works and reinterpretations of classics.

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