I’VE STAGED THE SAME PLAY MY ENTIRE LIFE
by Markas Petuchauskas
The boy from Pažiobris village near Šiluva, unlike many future theater critics and actors, didn’t take part in amateur efforts, didn’t dream of becoming an actor and didn’t visit the theater keenly. The first play he saw was in the tenth grade. Instead, he loved prose: Tolstoy, Dostoyevsky, and while he knew Shakespeare existed, he didn’t read him because “it wasn’t interesting then.” His older sister, an attorney who, her brother said, had “the true professional eye of a spectator,” and his teacher Bronius Burneckas, “a polyglot, a person of learning and a sort of Leonardo da Šiluva,” encouraged Nekrošius to enter the Conservatory. And so Eimuntas ended up in a course led by Vytautas Čibiras and Dalia Tamulevičiūtė. Two years later, bedazzled by these two wonderful directors, he matriculated at the GITIS in Moscow to study directing.































