Lina has a mission. She wants to start her studies, but keeps having flashbacks to that one day at highschool. That day her nude photo was shared online.
The week after that is chaos in her head. What exactly happened back then? And most importantly, who shared her photo?
Lina decides to go back to her old school, determined to reconstruct, Lina wants revenge. In Look at them (not me), Lina takes you on her mission. Who did this to her? And why did everyone treat Lina as the culprit, when she did nothing wrong, right? Lina makes her audience a supporter in an exciting whodunnit in which she makes herself the owner of the story, raising important questions about online shaming, consent, victimization and perpetration.
Look at them (not me) plays in a classroom. An actress creates the reconstruction in the classroom. All students (visitors) are given their own headphones, which contain music and memories and thoughts from Lina.
“I was really shocked when I heard in the aftermath of this performance how many teenagers face various forms of shaming. That made this performance-aside from the strong acting and the special concept-super relevant.” – Gregory | Curator Jonge Harten
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