
LYYLI - VIISINÄYTÖKSINEN NÄYTELMÄ
HENKILÖT
ENSIMÄINEN NÄYTÖS.
SIIVOSKA. VIRTASKA. - SIIVOSKA.
VIRTASKA.
SIIVOSKA.
VIRTASKA.
SIIVOSKA.
VIRTASKA.
SIIVOSKA.
A modest Helsinki apartment becomes a stage for quiet struggles and hopeful aspirations. In the opening scene, Siivonen, a weary housewife, and Virtaska, a hard‑working laundrywoman, exchange weary jokes over coffee while sorting a mountain of stained clothes. Their conversation drifts from the burdens of daily labor to the fragile peace they seek for their families, hinting at deeper anxieties about raising children in a world that seems to overlook their tenderness.
Through the voices of Siivonen, Virtaska, and a fleeting glimpse of their daughter Lyyli—now employed on the bustling Aleksanterinkatu—the play paints a portrait of early‑20th‑century working life. Themes of duty, religious comfort, and the fear of losing one's moral footing weave through the dialogue, suggesting how ordinary moments can carry the weight of larger social changes. Listeners will feel the cramped interiors, the scent of laundry, and the lingering hope that even modest lives might find a steadier future.
Language
fi
Duration
~1 hours (93K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-01-19
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1875–1925
A bold early Finnish writer, she brought class conflict and women’s lives to the stage with unusual directness. Her work sits at the crossroads of literature, journalism, and radical politics.
View all books
by Elvira Willman

by Elvira Willman

by Royall Tyler

by Dion Boucicault

by Ben Jonson

by William Wells Brown

by Izumo Takeda, Shoraku Miyoshi, Senryu Namiki

by Ben Jonson