ancient Greece
The Iliad, British Museum /Almeida TheatreSaturday, 15 August 2015![]() You don’t know Homer’s Iliad until you’ve heard it read aloud, all 24 books – not quite every line, but almost – and 16 hours of it. Yesterday's marathon was surely something like the events in which the Athenians kept the oral tradition... Read more... |
Bakkhai, Almeida TheatreFriday, 31 July 2015![]() This is the real Greek, bloody-fantastical thing. After the fascinating but flawed attempt to bring Aeschylus’s Oresteia into the 21st century, the Almeida has turned to a more tradition-conscious kind of experiment with Euripides’ last and greatest... Read more... |
10 Questions for Broadcaster Bettany HughesSunday, 26 July 2015How do you live a good life? Is wealth a good thing? How do you create a just society? The United Kingdom's electorate recently pondered such questions in the polling booth, and made their decision. The Labour Party is agonising over them as it... Read more... |
Modigliani, Estorick CollectionMonday, 11 May 2015![]() Modigliani’s short life was a template for countless aspiring artists who, in the period after his death in 1920, were only too willing to believe that a garret in Montmartre and a liking for absinthe held the secret to creative brilliance. While... Read more... |
Sex and the Church, BBC TwoSaturday, 11 April 2015![]() I’ve got no idea what the opposite of dumbing down might be. Swatting up? Whatever it is, it’s surely going to set the tone for the next couple of Friday nights on BBC Two, where Sex and the Church is as erudite a piece of television as we’re going... Read more... |
Defining Beauty: The Body in Ancient Greek Art, British MuseumThursday, 26 March 2015![]() We think we know it when we see it. But how, pray, do we define beauty? The ancient Greeks thought they had the measure of it. In the 4th century BC, the “chief forms of beauty,” according to Aristotle, were “order, symmetry and clear delineation.”... Read more... |
Antigone, BarbicanFriday, 06 March 2015![]() Last year the London stage was treated to an electrifying Medea and an intelligent, refreshing Electra, at The National and the Old Vic respectively. Now it’s the turn of the Barbican to unleash the formidable force of Greek tragedy upon us,... Read more... |
Witches and Wicked Bodies, British MuseumTuesday, 21 October 2014![]() Wicked women have always sold well, but more than that, they have fired the artistic imagination in a quite exceptional way. Exploring the depiction of the witch from the 15th to the 19th century, this exhibition is packed with images that must... Read more... |
HerculesWednesday, 23 July 2014![]() A Grecian palace on a studio lot. Gods wander about among the plywood and polystyrene looking deific. As a child is raised to the heavens a voice(over) is heard to intone the following legend.Oracle: You don’t want to believe those myths you’ve read... Read more... |
Medea, National TheatreTuesday, 22 July 2014![]() We know how the story ends, but then so did Euripides' first audience in Athens in 431 BC. Medea was already a familiar character of myth, a sorceress whose ungovernable passion for Jason led her to commit horrible murders when he abandoned her for... Read more... |
The Last Days of Troy, Royal Exchange, ManchesterWednesday, 14 May 2014![]() By picking his way through Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey, and Virgil’s Aeneid - written 600 years later - Simon Armitage has it all, including the horse and Helen, each of whom in their way enable the hordes to breach Troy’s gates. What with that and... Read more... |
Thebans, English National OperaSunday, 04 May 2014![]() It’s been a bloody week on the London stage. First Titus Andronicus maims and mutilates at the Globe, and now at English National Opera Frank McGuinness and Julian Anderson bring us a distillation of Sophocles’ three Theban plays, complete with eye-... Read more... |
