Kabaret TEY


Kabaret TEY was one of the most popular Polish cabarets in the 1970s and 1980s. Its main performers included Zenon Laskowik and Bohdan Smoleń.
The name TEY means "you" in the Poznań dialect.

History

Founded in the mid-1960s as Klops by Zenon Laskowik, Krzysztof Jaślar and Aleksander Gołębiowski, on 17 September 1971 it changed its name to Kabaret TEY. Popular performers included Bohdan Smoleń, Jadwiga Żywczak Marian Pogasz, Rudi Schuberth Janusz Rewiński, Grażyna Łobaszewska, Zbigniew Górny, Zbigniew Wodecki and Małgorzata Ostrowska, with music written by Włodzimierz Korcz. The most popular of these were Laskowik and Smoleń, who often performed as a team.
The cabaret style relied heavily on improvisation. Its first significant award was the satirical Szpilki magazine's Złota Szpilka award at the National Festival of Polish Song in Opole in 1973; this award also did much to popularize the cabaret. From 1977 the group worked with Polish national television. As the communist system of the People's Republic of Poland began to wind down, so did Kabaret TEY, whose career was very much built on parodying the existing political system and communist reality. The group had another successful performance in Opole in 1980, and toured both Poland and some other countries. In 1984 it changed its name to TEYATR. Its last performance in Poland took place in 1987 and the last performance for Polonia took place in 1988.

Reception

Kabaret TEY was one of the most popular Polish cabarets in the 1970s and 1980s. Its fame was such that in the mid-1980s, it became one of the main icons associated with Poznań, and some of the jokes and phrases coined in it have entered the Polish language and culture.
The group texts became more political in the aftermath of the rise of Solidarity and introduction of the martial law in Poland in 1981.

Performers

Artists