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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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CLASSICAL MYTHOLOGY IN MUSIC, DANCE, AND FILM 753<br />

modern vision. One of the finest productions of all three Theban plays of Sophocles<br />

(Oedipus the King, Oedipus at Colonus, and Antigone) was done for BBC Television,<br />

in a new translation by the director Don Taylor, with a cast that includes<br />

John Gielgud, Claire Bloom, and Anthony Quayle, all of whom are superb. A<br />

movie version of Antigone, written and directed by George Tzavellas, in Greek<br />

with English subtitles, has the incomparable Irene Papas in the title role as its<br />

greatest strength. A production of Jean Anouilh's Antigone for Great Performances<br />

on PBS Television, starring Genevieve Bujold, Stacy Keach, and Fritz Weaver,<br />

may be obtained from Broadway Theatre Archive. Antigone: Rites of Passion, a<br />

powerful movie by Amy Greenfield, adds a wonderful dimension of music and<br />

dance to the drama.<br />

Not to be ignored is Oedipus Wrecks, one of three short films included in the<br />

movie New York Stories, directed by and starring Woody Allen, about a fiftyyear-old<br />

neurotic lawyer tormented by the specter of his nagging mother.<br />

THE ORESTEIA<br />

An unusual production of Aeschylus' Oresteia, by the National Theatre of Great<br />

Britain, directed by Peter Hall, employs both a new rhyming translation by Tony<br />

Harrison and the stylized use of masks; although in many ways dramatically intense<br />

and well worth seeing, the overall conception verges at times on the monotonous.<br />

Of historic and histrionic importance is the movie version (1947) of Eugene<br />

O'Neill's American Oresteia, Mourning Becomes Plectra, particularly for the<br />

performances (very much in the grand manner) of Katina Paxinou and Michael<br />

Redgrave, but Rosalind Russell is miscast as Electra. A production of the play for<br />

Great Performances on PBS Television, starring Bruce Davison, Joan Hackett, and<br />

Roberta Maxwell is fortunately available from The Broadway Theatre Archive.<br />

The Italian director Pier Paolo Pasolini recounts his preparations for a film made<br />

in Africa of a modern version of the Oresteia (which he never lived to complete)<br />

in Notes for an African Orestes; he documented local rituals and searched local villages<br />

in Uganda and Tanzania for likely candidates and situations for the filming.<br />

This is a study of specialized interest, to be sure, even though it attempts, not always<br />

successfully, to illuminate many parallels between political and social issues<br />

in the ancient trilogy and those of Africa in the twentieth century.<br />

ORPHEUS<br />

Among the more significant treatments of ancient mythology are modern<br />

retellings of the Orpheus legend. The problematic but arresting play Orpheus Descending,<br />

by Tennessee Williams, has become a noteworthy film (under the title<br />

The Fugitive Kind), thanks to its stars, Marlon Brando, Anna Magnani, Joanne<br />

Woodward, Maureen Stapleton, and Victor Jory. The words of Marlon Brando<br />

in the brief opening scene of the movie speak volumes. The name of this

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