If you’re not up on your Greek Mythology, and don’t know the tale of Medea, written by Greek playwright Euripides in 431 BC, ...
It should have worked better. Classical Theatre’s season opener, Medea, has all the talent, tools and twists to make Euripides’ classical play something remarkable. There’s the crisp 95-minute runtime ...
Hell hath no fury like a sorceress scorned. This centuries-old tale burns with unrelenting emotional fire, and in Cherubini’s hands, it demands to be retold. Audiences witness the tragedy of Medea, a ...
GARRISON — Davis McCallum, director of the Hudson Valley Shakespeare Festival, took a big risk this year: For the first time in its 37-year history, the festival will not present one of its namesake’s ...
“Medea” by Euripides performance: 7 p.m., Carsen Theater in the Dairy Arts Center, 2590 Walnut St., Boulder. Medea’s shock and grief when her husband Jason discards her to marry King Creon’s daughter ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Sondra Radvanovsky has taken on one of opera’s most grueling roles. “You can’t just act it,” she said. “You really have to live it.” By Javier C.
There’s something pleasingly ritualistic (and, therefore, very Greek) about Michael Boyd’s new production of Medea for the Edinburgh Festival and the National Theatre of Scotland. Tom Piper’s designs, ...
“I go now to the Styx, the sacred river!” sang the soprano, and flinging aside her dagger, collapsed on the stage. As the curtain fell, buxom Eileen Farrell hoisted herself to her feet, trudged back ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results