Love letters for your hearts
True love stories that never grow old…
There are feelings that are destroyed by neither time nor death. There are words that are not written simply with ink – they are written with the heart.
We invite you to a sensitive, emotionally and aesthetically impactful performance, where actors will convey authentic love letters – real, unembellished, sometimes tragically beautiful.
These are not just words. These are living feelings, preserved in letters, memories, and history.
“Life is a magical tree whose branches are also its roots. All events intersect at the same point – love.”
This thought becomes the leitmotif of the entire performance, rippling through different eras, cultures, and personalities, all united by one thing – love.
The performance consists of 7 love stories and moving love letters that have survived to this day, featuring:
Frida Kahlo’s painfully beautiful love for Diego Rivera
Frida’s love was not calm – it was painful, passionate, and insanely open. She wrote not to move others – but because she felt: “I won’t ask you to kiss me… Because if I have to ask you for all that, then I don’t need any of it.”
Even when suffering physical pain and emotional betrayal, Frida wrote about Diego with a devotion that transcended the boundaries of rationality: “I love him so much that I cannot objectively perceive him or his life… I cannot speak of Diego as my husband – he never was and never will be anyone’s husband.”
And yet, Frida chose to live rather than suffer. Her final painting – “Viva la Vida” (“Long Live Life”) – is like a silent cry of triumph, like a manifesto of her life and love, despite the suffering.
Ludwig van Beethoven’s letters to his “Immortal Beloved”
“My angel, my all, my second self…” These words were found in a secret envelope after his death, without an address, without a date. Only a feeling. It is unknown whether this woman ever read them. But they live on – as this musical genius’s confession to a love that was not meant to be.
George Sand and Frédéric Chopin’s love – the flame of two talents
Their relationship lasted nearly a decade – complex, dramatic, lived through illness, creativity, and longing.
“There is only one happiness in life – to love and be loved.” George Sand’s words blazed, just like her love: “Do you know who I am? Are you familiar with the fire of the soul that not even time can extinguish?..”
Napoleon Bonaparte and Joséphine’s passionate correspondence
“Some feelings mean life itself, which is why they live until it ends.”
Passion erupts in their letters, full of desire and longing.
Jonas Basanavičius and Gabriela – a love that became destiny
Their love lasted five years, their marriage – three. Gabriela died on February 16th. 30 years later, on that same day, February 16th, Jonas Basanavičius also departed for eternity, having given all his unspent love to Lithuania, whose Act of Independence was also signed on February 16th. A coincidence, a happenstance? Or perhaps there are no coincidences?..
Sashenka’s letters from the novel “The Book of Letters” – a love that heals and liberates
“Only because of you have my hands, my feet, my body become precious to me – after all, you kissed it, you love it.”
“I look in the mirror and catch myself thinking: but this is the one he loves…”
This is a love that changes a woman from within, restoring her connection with herself.
Ronald Reagan’s letter to his son about marriage and true happiness
“A man has no greater happiness than the one he feels at the end of the day when he approaches the door and knows that someone is waiting on the other side.”
And a simple but accurate piece of advice: “If you say ‘I love you’ at least once a day, you will never get into trouble.”
This is fatherly wisdom, expressing the simple but eternal value of love.
Love is colors
What colors is love, anyway? Passionate red, like Frida’s love for Diego Rivera? Deep violet, like Ludwig van Beethoven’s letters to his mysterious beloved? Orange – like the lustful love of Napoleon Bonaparte for Joséphine, or burgundy, like Joséphine’s response to Napoleon? Or perhaps yellow, like a bright bouquet of spring flowers or the love of two talents – George Sand and Frédéric Chopin? Or blue, like a father’s wise letter to his son? Or perhaps... innocent white, like Sashenka’s pure letters to her beloved? Or green, like the fields of Lithuania, and Jonas Basanavičius’s love for his Gabriela?..
Or perhaps love is... multicolored? Different for everyone, undulating like the ocean and warming, cozy, like home?..
When words are no longer enough – the body speaks. TANGO
Love is sometimes too strong to be expressed in words. Then the body “betrays” it – with a touch, a glance, a held breath...
During the performance, the audience’s attention is captured by a passionate tango – a dance that contains the entire dynamic of love: longing and desire, jealousy and fidelity, pulling away and drawing near again. Tango is the story of two people, where every step says more than a spoken phrase. Just like our letters – some bold, others fragile, but all incredibly real. Tango is the color of love, which cannot be painted, but can be felt pulsing between two bodies.
A night that lasts longer than it takes
This is more than a show. This is a journey of feelings. A performance where every word heard can become your own memory or dream. Because everything in life eventually intersects at one point – love and its colors.