Hamlet Podervianskyi's
Hamlet is a short, satiric retelling of
Hamlet by
William Shakespeare, set in an imaginary Denmark that closely resembles the Soviet Union of the 1980s. A bored and indifferent hero doesn't care about religion, revenge, truth, or politics; all he wants is to get drunk. Eventually he kills everyone, including his father, and he is taken to an
asylum by a famous psychiatrist
Sigmund Freud.
Pavlik Morozov A longer (one-hour) play set in the
Siberian
taiga, where a group of members of the Soviet youth
Pioneer Movement is led by a
Communist official in search of God in order to prove (by not finding God) that God does not exist. Things rapidly change when God's messenger
Mykola Ostrovsky (a reference to Soviet writer
Nikolai Ostrovsky), is found in the process. The result of rapid change from
atheism to
paganism is minimal in terms of human behaviour. The name of the play refers to pioneer
Pavlik Morozov, a young Soviet communist "martyr".
Pizdets (Devoted to artists unions) A group of passive art-men live in a freight car, eat state-supplied noodles every day, and do absolutely nothing except pseudo-intellectual chat. They are completely happy inside because they are guaranteed their supply of noodles. They are too scared to leave the car for fear of losing their daily meal. On the contrary, local passers-by (non-art-men) are extremely intrigued by what is happening inside, and seek whatever ways to get into the community. In the end, car brakes are removed, it rolls and crashes offscene.
Katsapy Four Russian tourists enjoy the seaside in mid-level resort city (possibly
Feodosiya), speaking with heavy Moscovite pronunciation (known as
akanye). Four Ukrainian natives are approaching the city by train, speaking in
Surzhyk and discussing various things, events and nations with equal enmity. As train arrives to the destination in the last act, the Ukrainians meet Russians and proceed to attack them. As said at , the train described was the suburban one heading from Vladislavovka back to
Feodosiya. Katsaps were pictured being in
Novyi Svit (everything of that is in
Crimea).
Katsapy (sing.
Katsap) is a Ukrainian
ethnic slur for Russians, particularly those residing in Ukraine.
Danko This play is one of the shortest and at the same time one of the most often referred to and cited in unofficial communication and in public critical literature and media
discourse. Its plot is a parody of a classical play by a Soviet writer
Maksim Gorky, an idyllic myth of totalitarian Communist ideology. In Gorky's play a hero named Danko leads poor people to the light and happiness through hardships and darkness, burns his own heart to show them the way and dies after this self-sacrifice. Les Podervianskyi's Danko is a rather strange and pathetic fellow, he is also leading a mob of people somewhere but he does not know the way and as he is afraid that people would be angry with his poor directions he burns his heart first, then his liver and finally his kidneys. He dies without any sense and is forgotten by the mob at once. ==References==