When Theatre Becomes a Safe Space for Young Minds

Andrée Ruth Shammah brings back Chi come me by Roy Chen: a poetic and intimate theatre piece exploring adolescence, fragility and mental health through the healing power of theatre.

Chi come me
There are stories that don’t ask to be explained, only to be listened to. Chi come me, directed by Andrée Ruth Shammah and written by Roy Chen, is one of them.

After sold-out runs and critical acclaim, the play returns to the Franco Parenti Theatre in Milan, till March 1. But Chi come me is not a revival driven by nostalgia. It is a necessary return.

 

The text was born from a real encounter. In 2019, Roy Chen — acclaimed writer, translator and resident playwright of Teatro Gesher — was invited to attend a theatre workshop inside a mental health centre in Tel Aviv. What began as an observation slowly became a shared experience: hours spent listening, watching, playing, and breaking the silence together.

 

On stage, we meet a group of adolescents hospitalized in a psychiatric ward. Their days are filled with anxiety, fragility, moments of joy and sudden darkness. Dorit, a young theatre teacher, enters their closed world with a simple but radical proposal: to create a play together. Through rehearsals, words and movement, these young people begin to recognise themselves — and each other.

Chi come me moves lightly, yet leaves a deep trace. It speaks of mental health in adolescence without labels or rhetoric, choosing instead tenderness, irony and truth. Theatre becomes a space where emotions are not corrected or silenced, but welcomed.

 

In a time when the mental well-being of young people is often discussed through numbers and alarms, this play reminds us of something essential: awareness begins with empathy. And sometimes, healing starts by saying, softly, “me too”.

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For more info visit teatrofrancoparenti.it

 

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