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País Gambiarra: Brazilian dystopia where water is currency

Rio group Teatro de Busto opens a show where delivery workers are paid in liters of water. All sessions include simultaneous sign-language interpretation at Espaço Tápias, starting April 11.

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A dystopia born from reality

Improvisation as resistance. Scarcity as currency. Popular ingenuity as the only way out. That is the urgent, inventive territory where Rio de Janeiro theater group Teatro de Busto stages “País Gambiarra” at Espaço Tápias, opening April 11.

The collective script was born during the covid-19 pandemic lockdown. It imagines a fictional Brazil where water has become the medium of exchange and gig workers — embodied by delivery riders — are paid in liters. In this world, pipes are deliberately punctured, the government announces containment projects while profiting from a pharmaceutical, and death itself becomes a new delivery demand.

The story already inspired a graphic novel of the same name, distributed free of charge in public schools and libraries. Now it comes to life onstage, directed by Jefferson Santi, with a cast that blends sharp comedy and critical precision.

“País Gambiarra is not a play about a distant future. It is about right now. About what we invent when the State disappears. About how the makeshift fix becomes politics, art, and often the only way to keep from sinking.” — Jefferson Santi, director

Teatro de Busto: caricature, critique and social commitment

Formed by artists from different Brazilian states who met in theater programs at UNIRIO and UFRJ, Teatro de Busto has been building since 2022 a repertoire that moves between broad comedy and deep social reflection. The group earned three nominations for the Prêmio PRIO do Humor 2024 and has toured public schools in Rio de Janeiro and Maranhão, bringing workshops, staged readings, and art to communities with limited cultural access.

“País Gambiarra” keeps the group’s signature style: exaggerated physicality, extreme situations, and dramaturgy that exposes precarity without being didactic. Every performance includes simultaneous Brazilian Sign Language (Libras) interpretation, underlining the collective’s commitment to art as a universal right.

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País Gambiarra: Brazilian dystopia where water is currency
Photo: Michele Gomes
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