When your love story is built on danger, it can only end badly. Seattle Shakespeare Company will present Medea by Euripides at the Center Theatre at Seattle Center. Kelly Kitchens directs this searing Greek tragedy featuring choreography by Donald Byrd October 18-November 13, 2016.
"People have so many ideas about what Medea is...the rage, the crazy woman," said director
Kelly Kitchens at the first rehearsal for the play. "So, I think this is a love story. Honestly, it's a love story that has gone terribly, terribly wrong."
Kitchens, in preparing to direct
Medea, discovered really just modern a play from 431 BC really is. She cited how female characters like Medea, Electra, and Clytemnestra moved away from the domestic sidelines to take center stage with their experiences and challenge the established order. "It's a protofeminist play. It's a play and story for today. It's a play and story for the marginalized, for the broken-hearted, and for the betrayed."
"I think the play is arguing for understanding of her actions, as horrific as they may be. And understanding what happens when you do push someone to
The Edge. When you do marginalize them and just keep pushing them out," said Kitchens. "She's not crazy. She is not mad. She is a human being that's been pushed to
The Edge. And the tragedy is in that."
Medea abandons her home and country to help Jason, the man she loves. When he discards her and their children for a new bride, the blow strikes deep into Medea's heart. She transforms into concentra
TEd White-hot fury. Love smolders to hate then burns to revenge, driving her to savage acts. With their children caught in the crossfire, Medea scorches all and everything around her.
This will be the second time Seattle Shakespeare Company has produced a classical Greek play. Medea features a cast of 13 actors.
Alexandra Tavares, who has appeared with Seattle Shakespeare Company as Emilia in
Othello, will play Medea. Playing her husband Jason will be Sylvester F. Kamara who appeared in the company's productions of
Measure for Measure and
Titus Andronicus. Local choreographer
Donald Byrd will create movement and dance pieces for the Women of Corinth (Chorus). Local musician Shenandoah Davis has created original music set to the play's text to accompany the Chorus' dialogue.
Tickets to
Medea are available now through the Seattle Shakespeare Company Box Office at
206-733-8222 as well as online at
www.seattleshakespeare.org.
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