ancient Greece
Electra, Gate TheatreMonday, 18 April 2011![]() Certain big dramas can work really well in small places. Sophocles’s revenge play Electra (end of the fifth century BC) is as consequential, and influential, as they come; the Gate Theatre one of the smallest spaces in London. It continually... Read more... |
The Return of Ulysses, ENO, Young VicFriday, 25 March 2011![]() Wars have no end. Soldiers may come home, battlefields may be vacated, peace treaties signed, but scars remain. The violence of combat has a way of revisiting itself on the victors and vanquished and ravaging soul and state. This was the message of... Read more... |
Nancy Spero & Marcus Coates, Serpentine GallerySunday, 13 March 2011![]() A maypole greets you on entry to the Serpentine Gallery; don’t expect a cheery celebration of spring, though. Nancy Spero’s installation Maypole: Take No Prisoners II (2008) is a scream of rage against violence and its hapless victims. Dangling from... Read more... |
Afghanistan: Crossroads of the Ancient World, British MuseumThursday, 10 March 2011![]() I’m in an exhibition of ancient artefacts from Afghanistan, all from the National Museum at Kabul, but I may well have stumbled into the wrong room at the British Museum. I could be in the BM’s Hellenic section of Greek art, or, taking a few steps... Read more... |
A New York transformation for Edinburgh's MetamorphosesMonday, 30 August 2010The Blitz wartime version of Ovid’s Metamorphoses that David Nice was raving about is New York-bound now, after winning one of the Edinburgh Fringe Festival’s most generous awards, the Carol Tambor Best of Edinburgh Award. This, set up in 2004 in... Read more... |
Semele, Théâtre de Champs-ÉlyséesThursday, 01 July 2010![]() David McVicar's revival production of Handel's oratorio-cum-opera Semele isn't terribly clever or beautiful or impressive, or fecund with ideas or detail or emotion. But it does work. It does tell the story. And what brings colour to its initially... Read more... |
Atlantis: The Evidence, BBC TwoThursday, 03 June 2010![]() Here’s a question: what have the eminent Victorian statesman and four-times prime minister William Gladstone and the Nazi Reichsführer Heinrich Himmler have in common? Well, if you didn’t catch last night’s Timewatch Special, you'd probably never... Read more... |
Tom Paulin on Translating MedeaTuesday, 02 February 2010![]() I came to Medea because 26 years back, the Field Day Theatre Company in Derry - started by Brian Friel and Stephen Rea - asked me to a version of Antigone. Entitled The Riot Act, it was staged in the Guildhall in Derry in September 1984 and toured... Read more... |
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