Oscar nominee, screenwriter, playwright, actress, producer and director, authentic and multi -talented, Nia Vardalos, selects the historic Pallas Theater to present, for the first time in Greek, in her hometown of Tiny Beautiful Things, in her hometown. It notes a particularly great artistic, collecting success and bitter reviews.

“Tiny Beautiful Things” is the theatrical cover, which has performed in Cheryl Strayed’s popular novel, “Little Beautiful Things”, a collection of true letters that each of us could have written in which Strayed responds with optimism and optimism and Tenderness to all who seek guidance for obstacles, big and small.

Nia Vardalos decorated the book with care and love and starred in the theatrical productions of the play in New York and Los Angeles. For NIA, in addition to cinema, theater remains its great love and source of creativity. Nia Vardalos will star and direct her theater at the Pallas Theater in Athens. The first directed by the play was carried out by the Tony Award -winning director Thomas Kail, whose initial premiere was held at the theaters of New York in 2016.

This laxative drama has taken on so much resonance, which then created new productions in theaters of different countries and continents, and has been played continuously from then until today.

The world -renowned popular artist Nia Vardalos chooses to carry out a circle of spring performances, adapting the performance to Greek, translated and directed by Spyros Katsagani, with a powerful cast of Greek actors, Dimitris Papanou In Greece, for the first time in Greek, for the first time at the Pallas Theater.

From May 16, 2025, she will share with the Greek public a fascinating and lax experience, with humor, tenderness, empathy and drama, giving her hometown to her endless talent.

One of the protagonists chosen, Danai Loukakis cannot hide her joy – and very reasonably – for this cooperation. Breakfast@ Star’s camera and Elias Skoulas succeeded her outside the Alekos Alexandrakis Theater, where she is currently starring in Dimitra Papadopoulou’s “In Chuck”, which has now tore in Thessaloniki and has now come down to Athens.