Radio play based on Nina Dashevskaya’s work.
“I’m not weird, I’m normal. It’s all the others who are weird. In fact, you’re considered normal only because there are more of you! As if if there are more people, then they’re right. By the way, most people thought that the Earth was flat.”
At school, Lev Inozemtsev is considered strange. The only person with whom he’s found common ground—by a twist of fate—sits at the same desk with the one who mocks Lev the most. And Lev Inozemtsev loves music, because it’s logical. It’s a pity that few people understand that.
Nina Dashevskaya is the author of eight books for children and teenagers, a laureate of the literary awards “Knyguru,” “New Children’s Book,” and the Krapivins’ Prize.
“Day of Pi” is a story about friendship and love—about how hard it is to accept yourself and to hear someone else.
Roles and performers:
Lev — Alexey Vesyolkin;
Lev’s grandfather — Julien Balmusov;
Lev’s grandmother — Tatyana Kuryanova;
Roma — Alexander Bobrov;
Kirill — Ilya Smirnov;
Sonya — Anna Taratorkina;
geography teacher / woman behind the wheel — Olga Grishova;
girl — Tatyana Vesyolkina;
math teacher — Alexey Myasnikov;
Kirill’s father — Alexander Ponomaryov;
Gerda — Darya Belousova;
Kirill’s mother — Irina Ponomaryova (known as Avtukh);
Valya — Darya Brankevich;
also — Olga Kuznetsova.