Greek Odyssey.

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    • Abstract:
      I saw my first Greek play in 1973 on the night England failed to qualify for the World Cup, when they could not score against Poland. I stood in a dingy fish and chip shop near Waterloo Station and watched the last minutes. The newspapers were quick to use the word 'tragedy'… But what I had seen in the theatre made a more lastingly profound impression on me. The Bacchae of Euripides had been translated — or adapted — by the great African ' playwright Wole Soyinke, and had a chorus of seminaked and wild dancing women (which made a predictably intense impression on an adolescent boy). The set of the Old Vic was hung with huge scarlet cloths up into the flies, and at the moment when Dionysus calls for the destruction of Pentheus' palace, the cloths fell to the ground revealing the theatre's bare bones behind. The play was overwhelming in its sensuous and physical intensity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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