It has not always been easy. There was drama in the beginning, but then they got used to it. And now they live together. Couple, homeostasis, and peace. And then suddenly there is a third person—the equilibrium changes. Everything is set in motion. Actually, no one wanted it, but it is happening. Everything will be different from now on. Is it even possible for everything to be different? And how DIFFERENT? Will it be drama again? And does it even have to be a drama? And how to arrange it so that it doesn't make everyone sick...?
A powerfully sensual production connecting movement, visuality, and words, which puts into parallel its main theme of cancer, its growth, and metastases with the phenomenon of polyamory. How is it possible to share love between more than two people? Does the level of love increase with the number of partners? Does the entry of a third partner into a relationship have to be understood as infidelity, or is it our normative thinking that if we overcome, we will find a way out of emotional disaster? Is it possible to survive all this exuberance?
The project Tumor: Polyamor is supported by a grant from Iceland, Liechtenstein, and Norway within the EEA Funds. It follows on from A studio Rubín's unique collaboration with the Czech-Scandinavian performance collective T.I.T.S., which this time connected with the cultural space Pikene på Broen from Kirkenes, Norway.