ancient Greece
The Lightning Child, Shakespeare's GlobeThursday, 19 September 2013![]() Having boundaries actually sets us free. So Neil Armstrong's wife argues. She is dogmatically keen to stop her husband rocketing off to the moon in the first scene of The Lightning Child – a groundbreaking show in so far as it's the first musical to... Read more... |
Total War: Rome IIFriday, 13 September 2013![]() The greatest strategy videogames deliver a balance of time to think and pressure to act. The greatest strategy videogames deliver the thrill of battle mixed with clear strategic choice. Several entries in the Total War series count as great strategy... Read more... |
Ancient Greece: The Greatest Show on Earth, BBC FourWednesday, 28 August 2013![]() Brush up your geography and dust down your history – Dr Michael Scott is investigating the sources of Greek drama and their influence on all theatre to the present day. But he isn’t going to make it easy. The opening instalment of Ancient... Read more... |
Who Were the Greeks?, BBC Two/Eye Spy, Channel 4Friday, 28 June 2013When television goes off exploring classical civilisation, you can hear those lines from The Life of Brian chiming in your head. “Apart from better sanitation and medicine and education and irrigation and public health and roads and a freshwater... Read more... |
Imeneo, Academy of Ancient Music, Hogwood, Barbican HallThursday, 30 May 2013![]() There are Handel operas where you wait impatiently for the handful of truly original set-pieces to light up the action, hoping the singers are equal to their challenges. One such is surely Siroe, Re di Persia, bravely staged at the Göttingen Handel... Read more... |
Monteverdi Choir, London Symphony Orchestra, Gardiner, Barbican HallFriday, 26 April 2013![]() Backed up by reasonably adventurous orchestral programming, lucky conductors can forge a strong Stravinsky evening by picking and mixing from his five ancient Greek rituals. Sir John Eliot Gardiner, unintentionally homaging the late Sir Colin Davis... Read more... |
The Minotaur, Royal OperaFriday, 18 January 2013![]() Flesh-tearing, woman-raping, body-goring brute he may be, but he's misunderstood, that Minotaur. It's a bold argument to make, but this is the contention of Harrison Birtwistle and David Harsent's 2008 opera. They are aided by a surprisingly... Read more... |
The Trojan Women, Gate TheatreTuesday, 13 November 2012Not even a cameo by Tamsin Greig can redeem this painful adaptation of Euripides' The Trojan Women. For an hour and a half it screams with anguish, verging at times on the parodic. The production is a puzzle. Caroline Bird has updated the... Read more... |
Desire Under the Elms, Lyric HammersmithFriday, 12 October 2012![]() Pity the A-level English student: for them the “rarely seen masterpieces” that creep onto the curriculum and into the theatres. Judging from the frequently giggling reaction of the audience last night of around 100 17- and 18-year-olds, Eugene O’... Read more... |
Les Troyens, Royal OperaTuesday, 26 June 2012![]() Les Troyens is one of music's mythical beasts. The greatest opera that few will have ever seen. Until recently the epic was considered so demanding that it was thought unstageable. David McVicar's new production for the Royal Opera House is only the... Read more... |
Antigone, National TheatreThursday, 31 May 2012![]() Although some contemporary plays — notably Posh and 13 — have accurately taken the temperature of the times, what about the timeless classics? Does Sophocles’s Antigone (dated about 441BC) have anything to say to us today? How can it be of our time... Read more... |
Idomeneo, Barbican HallSunday, 12 June 2011![]() Mozart's Idomeneo is subjected to a famous bit of abuse in Milos Forman's Amadeus. "A most tiresome piece," a courtier critic sniffs. "Too much spice. Too many notes." As it happens, not a wholly inaccurate statement. The work is quite an exotic... Read more... |
