American Repertory Theatre
 

Dionysos

THE BACCHAE

Closed January 24, 1998

November 21, 1997 - January 24, 1998 at the Loeb Drama Center

In repertory with Peter Pan and Wendy

by Euripides
translated by Paul Schmidt
directed by François Rochaix
choreography by Amy Spencer & Richard Colton
set design by Jean-Claude Maret
costume design by Catherine Zuber
lighting design by Michael Chybowski
sound design by Christopher Walker
stage manager Wendy Beaton

One of the greatest of all Greek dramas, The Bacchae powerfully dramatizes the conflict between the emotional and rational sides of the human psyche. When the people of Thebes deny the existence of the god Dionysos, he punishes them by unleashing the full force of female sexuality, thereby destroying social order and driving them to certain tragedy. By turns savage, comic, and intensely lyrical, The Bacchae, once a war cry for free love, is particularly poignant today in the aftermath of the sexual revolution. François Rochaix, who staged the complete trilogy The Oresteia two seasons ago, returns to bring Euripides' finest and most provocative play to life.


Cast

Leslie Beatty

. . . Chorus

Debora Cahn

. . . Chorus

Dmetrius Conley-Williams

. . . Messenger

Randy Danson

. . . Agave

Alvin Epstein

. . . Kadmos

Benjamin Evett

. . . Pentheus

Gin Hammond

. . . Chorus

Michael Edo Keane

. . . Dionysos

Will LeBow

. . . Tiresias

Karen MacDonald

. . . Chorus Leader

Courtney Rackley

. . . Chorus

Robert Ross

. . . Servant

Stephen Rowe

. . . Cowherd

Vessela Stoyanova

. . . Percussionist/Chorus

Rachael Warren

. . . Chorus

Tricia Williams

. . . Percussionist/Chorus


Synopsis

Dionysos, god of wine and theatre, has arrived in his birthplace, the Greek city of Thebes. When he was born, his mother's sisters refused to believe that he was the son of Zeus, and now he has returned to punish their blasphemy and prove his divinity.

Dionysos whips the Theban women into an orgiastic frenzy and leads them into the mountains, where they worship him with song and dance. Returning to the city, he confronts the young King of Thebes, his cousin Pentheus, who continues to deny the god's existence, despite the warnings of his grandfather Kadmos and the seer Tiresias. Pentheus imprisons Dionysos, but the god escapes and, luring the king into the mountains to spy on the women's ecstatic revels, enacts a terrible revenge on Pentheus and all the people of Thebes.


Related Links

Production Photos

All photos by Richard Feldman.

webmanager@amrep.org
This page updated October 29, 1998