I believe in you.
Comedy in two parts by Vadim Korostiliev
Translation: Horia Deleanu and Irina Popescu
Artistic director: Dorel Urlăţeanu
Scenography: Tatiana Manolescu Uleu
Incidental music: Iuliu Kavassi
Premiere date: March 31, 1962
In the magazine "Teatrul", no. 1/962, Al. Popovici observes that the play "Cred în tine" borrows the conventions of a fairy tale, transforming the heroine of the play into a Cinderella and a banal accountant into a wizard capable of operating profound changes in people and in their way of seeing each other.
A young husband immediately after marriage becomes a bored, grumpy person, and Irina's qualities and charm cease to interest him. Appealing primarily to faith in his fellow man, the sorcerer friend will transform Irina with the help of a simple ball gown. Representative of poetry, of aesthetic harmony, he invites others to dream, as to a natural fact of existence. Thus, the neglected wife again becomes for her husband the embodiment of beauty, of creative aspirations. However, Irina does not change, but the perspective of her husband, indifferent until then to immediate truths, more attracted to astral radiance than to the close ones.
As the author Vadim Korostiliov states in the program of the show, the play "I Believe in You" "is neither a fairy tale nor a reality. Rather, it is both. Miracles often happen in life, but we don't see them. And when you see them, you can tell how a man like another became wonderful, just because he believed in him, because he believed that he was truly wonderful."„
Distribution:
Irina: Genoveva Matici
Sergey: Liviu Martinus
Vladimir: George Pintilescu
Prompter: Sofica Spoiala
Sound engineer: Ştefan Bartos
