About the play
A Tomb for Boris Davidovich is one of the most important and most respected literary works in the history of Yugoslavia. Its original appearance in 1976 caused an uproar in the cultural circles, with the newspapers calling it “the biggest post-war literary affair”. The ruthless and sensationalist criticism of Kiš’s book hadn’t gotten in the way of inspiring and heated debates between various artists and politicians in the past few decades, while its pseudo-documentary style and the epic structure of its cover stories successfully expose the mechanisms of history and various oppressive systems that this book belongs to. Kiš’s revolutionary hero is hopeless, which is the essence of the myth that this play wants to shed light on. The play does it by going deeply into the root of his sufferings. The team gathered around this cult text examines the social, religious, political and ideological phenomena inherent in the narrative of Danilo Kiš, through a tragic tale of Novski. In addition, the performance of Ivica Buljan opens a door towards understanding the fragility of heroes who are not offered as idealized figures, but as human beings whose existence is full of their own confusion and inconsistencies.