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Aeschylus

November 2023

  • Kenan Malik

    In the Middle East, as in Greek tragedy, justice must prevail over moral absolutism

    Kenan Malik
    When political solutions lose out to vengeance, in Aeschylus’s words, ‘Where will it end?’

May 2022

  • Age of Rage.

    Age of Rage review – ancient Greek tragedy explodes into our times

    While the emotional complexities remain, Van Hove’s high-octane makeover featuring unrelenting pyrotechnics and riveting performances is a visual epic

April 2022

  • Terror and tragedy … Dafni Krazoudi in The Burnt City.

    Punchdrunk: The Burnt City review – spectacle eclipses story in siege of Troy epic

    This immersive retelling of Greek tragedies is stylish and atmospheric but lacks narrative momentum and its scattered scenes can be frustratingly arcane

January 2022

  • Captive Andromache by Frederic Leighton (1830-1896).

    Top 10s
    Top 10 novels inspired by Greek myths

    From James Joyce to Ali Smith and Chigozie Obioma, the archetypal stories of the ancients have inspired some of our best fiction

November 2017

  • The Suppliant Women at the Young Vic.

    The Suppliant Women review – an astonishing Greek chorus finds its voice

    Aeschylus speaks directly to us in David Greig’s electrifying adaptation

July 2017

  • Kristin Scott Thomas in Sophocles’ Electra

    Found in translation: how women are making the classics their own

    Women have long been marginalised in the world of ancient texts, but female scholars and translators are finally having their say

May 2017

  • Fang-Yi Sheu of the Martha Graham Dance Company performs a scene from "Clytemnestra" during a dress rehearsal before opening night on May 12, 2009 at the Skirball Center for the Performing Arts in New York. The dance company is celebrating its 50th anniversary. AFP PHOTO/TIMOTHY A. CLARY (Photo credit should read TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP/Getty Images)

    Book of the week
    House of Names by Colm Tóibín review – Greek myths made human

    This retelling of the tragedy of the house of Atreus is magnificently dramatic, but loses its way in Orestes’ wanderings

January 2017

  • Drowning in paradoxes … Theresa May.

    Point of view
    Does Theresa May really know what citizenship means?

    The prime minister may not know her Aeschylus, writes the novelist Tom McCarthy, but she has a duty to understand the basic concepts she invokes

November 2016

  • The plot thickens … Helen McCrory in Medea, a play that could have had up to 19 variations.

    The one where Medea saves her kids: lost classics of Greek tragedy

    In his new book, Matthew Wright analyses the remaining evidence of hundreds of Athenian texts that, packed with sex, magic and happy endings, would give a radically different impression of the genre

October 2016

  • Teyonah Parris in Spike Lee’s Chi-Raq

    Ditching classics at A-level is little short of a tragedy

    Natalie Haynes
    Classics underpins much of the modern world; the AQA exam board’s decision to end A-levels in classical civilisation, archaeology and history of art is lamentable

September 2016

  • David Greig

    'This play is primal': David Greig on an ancient drama more relevant than ever

    The new artistic director of Edinburgh’s Lyceum theatre explains how The Suppliant Women, Aeschylus’s 2,500-year-old play about a refugee crisis, offers a ‘profound statement on the purpose of theatre’

May 2016

  • This Restless House

    This Restless House five-star review – Zinnie Harris's electrifying Oresteia

    Directed by Dominic Hill, this four-hour epic of ambition and power is a sinewy reworking of Aeschylus that explodes into a cacophonous climax

December 2015

  • Lia Williams and Angus Wright in Oresteia by Aeschylus at the Almeida.

    Best culture 2015
    Lyn Gardner's top 10 theatre of 2015

    The Almeida’s enthralling Oresteia is singled out by Lyn Gardner who, in no set order, chooses her other essential productions of the year

November 2015

  • The Female Chorus in The Oresteia, directed by Blanche McIntyre.

    The Oresteia review – strong performances at odds with the setting

    Ancient and modern clash in a production that juxtaposes a potent mythic past with a contemporary-styled and costumed present

October 2015

  • Gary Shelford (Agamemnon), Lyndsey Marshal (Clytemnestra), and Hedydd Dylan (Cassandra) in The Oresteia, translated by Ted Hughes, directed by Blanche McIntyre. Presented by HOME Manchester (23 Oct - 14 Nov 2015). Photo by Graeme Cooper

    The Oresteia review – gripping Aeschylus in a hellish beach resort

  • Out 1: Noli Me Tangere

    Out 1: Noli Me Tangere review – 13-hour art film is a buff's ultimate challenge

September 2015

  • Katy Stephens's Clytemnestra raises a bloody arm

    The Oresteia review – visceral in every sense

    Kate Kellaway: By the end of the second play, two bloodbaths down and hoping for a cathartic finish, the viewer is reeling
  • Katy Stephens as Clytemnestra in Oresteia

    The Oresteia review – a vigorous, vivid, but inconsistent take on Aeschylus

    Rory Mullarkey’s adaptation is linguistically rich, but Adele Thomas’s production can’t seem to settle on a style
  • Benedict Cumberbatch in Hamlet, Joanna Lumley in The Cherry Orchard and Mark Rylance in Jerusalem

    From Oedipus to The History Boys: Michael Billington's 101 greatest plays

    In his new book, the Guardian’s theatre critic has selected what he thinks are the 101 greatest plays ever written, in any language – so do you agree?

August 2015

  • 101 greatest plays Henry IV Pt 1 King Lear Entertainer

    Choosing my 101 greatest plays – and why I left out King Lear

    How do you even begin to pick the world’s 101 greatest plays? The Guardian’s theatre critic explains how he approached this controversial task for his new book – and admits he is already having second thoughts
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