Apparatschik is where traditional russian folklore meets ska, punk and polka and you wash it


all down with a glass of vodka. On friday evening Stockholm´s Södrateatern´s Kägelbanan turned into a balalaika frenzy and they were all there: Leo Tolstoi,

his character Anna Karenina,


the staff at Kägelbanan was right:

Nazdrovia!
/Aleksei Mantonov
No comments:
Post a Comment