Χίλιοι λόγοι για να τσακωθείς
Πρακτικές Πληροφορίες
| Ημερομηνία | Δευτέρα 2 Μαρτίου |
|---|---|
| Ώρα | 11:00 |
| Τιμή | €10 |
| Εισιτήρια | Αγοράστε εισιτήρια |
| Χώρος | 104 (Gazi) |
| Διεύθυνση | Eumolpidon 41, Athens 118 54 |
Περιγραφή στα Αγγλικά
Chilioi Logoi gia na Tsakotheis is an interactive children's theater performance at Theatro 104 in Gazi, running Sundays at 11:00 through March 29, 2026. A boy named Markos walks onstage carrying a wooden sword, a shield, and a permanent scowl.
The Tik Tak Do company, founded in Athens in 2017, creates original musical theater for young audiences that treats emotions as subject matter rather than decoration. This is their second year running this production, built around a premise children recognize immediately: Markos lives in the Castle of Anger and argues with everything. When his sword and shield break, the journey begins — through the Castle of Sadness, the Castle of Fear, the Castle of Joy, and the Castle of Disgust. Live music carries each transition, and the children in the room are not watching passively. They participate, they respond, they help Markos figure out what he already suspects — that anger is not the only tool in the box.
The room is parents and grandparents seated alongside three-to-twelve-year-olds who have strong feelings about fairness and are not shy about voicing them.
Theatro 104 sits on Eumolpidon 41 in the Gazi arts district — a neighborhood theater with the informal energy that lets small children feel like they belong rather than like they are borrowing an adult space. Sixty minutes, no interval.
If your child sits still and quiet for an hour without prompting, this show may feel too participatory. But if they are the kind who talks back to the screen, argues with bedtime, and needs to know why sadness exists, the Tik Tak Do company built this hour for them.
Theatro 104 is a three-minute walk from Kerameikos metro. Curtain at 11:00 sharp on Sundays. Tickets ten euros through more.com, with reduced rates available. Arrive a few minutes early — the room is small enough that latecomers disrupt the opening.
A show about anger that never once tells a child to stop being angry — it just hands them four more castles to visit.