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Euripides' Orestes: an OALS production

27-30 November 2024, O 'Reilly Theatre, Keble College Oxford

Reprised 22 June, Gulbenkian Theatre, Canterbury

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This production, a unique collaborative project led by the Oxford Ancient Languages Society, staged a complete dramatic recreation of Euripides’ play, demonstrating the vivid dramatic fruits of meticulous, interdisciplinary scholarship.

 

 

 

 

 

 



It was performed entirely in the original Ancient Greek (with English surtitles), with authentic costumes and masks. Crucially, it restored Euripides’ drama to its full musical glory. All the sections of the play that were originally sung were set to music, newly composed in the ancient Greek modes, using all available evidence about Euripidean music, and incorporating an ancient fragment of music from the play that may be by Euripides’ own hand.

The chorus and our talented solo singers were accompanied on the aulos (ancient double-pipes) by the renowned aulete Callum Armstrong, resulting in a transformative audience experience, closer than ever to the Athenian stage.

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A full recording of this sell-out production can be found here.

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We have also created a short introductory video explaining what makes this production so exciting and offering a window into its creation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MBYA98soukA

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And a longer version of the latter, which forms a short documentary that discusses in more detail the academic and artistic processes behind the production: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hqaZUsvwwWM

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Read more about the play in these three articles by the director!

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https://antigonejournal.com/2025/03/oals-recreating-euripides-orestes/

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https://antigonejournal.com/2025/03/making-sense-of-euripides-orestes/

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https://antigonejournal.com/2025/03/setting-euripides-to-music/

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And take a look at the Oxford performance's programme on our blog!

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In Argos, Orestes, with the help of sister Electra and their friend Pylades, has committed the worst crime imaginable: he has killed his own mother, in vengeance for her murder of his father, and is now tormented by the Furies. But what will happen next? Can Orestes and Electra escape death at the hands of the Argives, who see them more as criminals than as heroes? And can they rely on the help of their uncle Menelaus, who has just returned from Troy with his wife, the much-despised Helen?


As the play unfolds, we are forced ourselves to face some difficult questions: are Orestes and his friends in fact heroes or criminals? How far can the heroic ethic stretch before it becomes little more than self-parody? And above all, can we even attach a meaning to this vivid high drama?


The Orestes is one of the most exciting of Euripides’ plays, and the most popular in antiquity. It displays the height of his dramatic innovation, and—rarely for Greek tragedy—while its characters and framework are drawn from traditional mythology, the plot itself is entirely Euripides’ invention.

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Directed by Nicholas Romanos

Producer: Kelly Yu

Associate Director: Elspeth Rogers

Assistant Director: Angela Yu

Stage Manager: Älvi Lindborg-Koh

 

CAST:

Orestes: Althea Sovani

Electra: Eleanor McIver

Pylades: Maxwell Drew

Phrygian: Peregrine Neger

Menelaus: Alexandre Guilloteau

Tyndareus: Aron Szocs (Canterbury performance: George Doxiadis)

Messenger: Jialin Li

Helen: Ivana Kuric (Canterbury performance: Ashby Neterer)

Hermione: Josephine Krupa (Canterbury performance: Elizabeth Ogle)

Apollo: Jonathan Nathan

 

CHORUS:

Nicholas Romanos (Chorus leader)

Cooper Ackerly

Matthias Erbacher

Dimitar Dimitrov

Krasimir Ivanov

Beth Parker

Christian Sanders

Dorothea Shaw

Abigail Sleep

Mark Tomov (á¼ σθένει)

Alexandre Trébuchon

Carole Tucker

Leon Wirtz

Angela Yu

Kelly Yu

 

MUSIC

Nicholas Romanos

Beth Parker

With aulos part composed and played by Callum Armstrong.

 

TEXT EDITING

Nicholas Romanos

Paige Crawley

Merten Wiltshire

Maxwell Drew

 

COSTUMES/MASKS

Research: Lucy French, Adam Rosengarten, Samuel Forrest

Costume design: Lucy French

Costume making: Carol Romanos

Mask design and making: Jacinta Hunter, assisted by William Ingham

With thanks to Reading Ancient Schoolroom for the Phrygian’s shoes.

 

SET/PROPS

Research: Nathaniel Denton

Design/sourcing: Ferne Burrell, Nathaniel Denton

Torches: Benjamin Atkinson

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CHOREOGRAPHY

Christine Zhao

Beth Parker

Nicholas Romanos

 

LIGHTING

Isabelle Carey-Young​

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SUBTITLE OPERATION

Paige Crawley

Eliza Dean

Chorus-Electra edited.jpg
Hermione chorus.jpg
Logo.jpg
Orestes-Phrygian.jpg
Electra-Orestes-Pylades.jpg
Messenger-chorus.jpg

Adde nomen tuum nostro indici

Gratias tibi agimus!

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