Euripides Medea

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  • čas přidán 28. 07. 2024

Komentáře • 325

  • @RelaxWithDog
    @RelaxWithDog Před 3 lety +452

    For anyone confused doing a school project... People have been obsessed with this play for THOUSANDS of years. There is a really good reason for that! Give it a chance and you might see why people love it so much - The writing beautifully describes the timeless feelings of despair and rage at being abandoned by someone you love. It is easier to understand when you have felt rage and experienced something terrible yourself. Both Medea and Jason are being unreasonable in timeless human ways - Jason is messing everything up by "trying to have it all" (he wants more power and hopes he can get it by marrying this new young princess - the foolish thing is that even though he has to betray his first wife, hes hoping he wont have to deal with the consequences of this betrayal, and just go about his new perfect life). Medeas foolishnes is that she is in fact suffering a terrible injustice, but instead of making the best of her new situation, she decides to go down fighting and bring everyone down with her. I think one of the "morals" of this ancient story is that LIFE IS NOT FAIR, and to get the best outcome in life, you must compromise and accept the bad stuff - instead of DYING and RUINING EVERYTHING by trying to hang on to unrealistic dreams. Cheers!

    • @silvia7058
      @silvia7058 Před 3 lety +8

      woww thank you for this analysis!

    • @RelaxWithDog
      @RelaxWithDog Před 3 lety +4

      @@silvia7058 no prob - hope you enjoy this awesome performance

    • @pacman5698
      @pacman5698 Před 3 lety +8

      Truth be told, this is probably going to be relevant for a while. So many times when heroes are depicted as heavily flawed beings that ended up messing up badly in their later years or end up discovering a lot of what they did in the past deserves nuance and more critical looks, there can be a lot of cries that they "ruined" the character via making him "lame" or "a coward". But instead, many need to understand heroes, and the myths they spring from are more than just things you can easily emulate with an action figure in a playroom. They're about delving deep into the psyches of humans and all their flaws throughout their lives from beginning to death, in order to explore how much human beings themselves change, fail, succeed, and develop into different mindsets throughout the years they live.

    • @jridiala4370
      @jridiala4370 Před 3 lety +4

      i will make your comment as a conclusion on my exam next week. thank u a lot

    • @harvestcanada
      @harvestcanada Před 2 lety +7

      But then again the original play was never meant to be played by a woman. Medea was made by men for men.
      I can't help feeling Medea was a little over the top. Then again the play can be seen as an ancient form of xenophobia and misogynistic.

  • @Lydia.Callaghan
    @Lydia.Callaghan Před 3 lety +903

    POV: your here for homework

  • @joetrapp9187
    @joetrapp9187 Před 3 lety +145

    R.I.P. Zoe Caldwell. Both she in this version (1982) and Diana Rigg (1994) won Tony Awards as Medea, and both died this year.

    • @clarequilty4962
      @clarequilty4962 Před 3 lety +12

      Caldwell gives one of the most powerful performances I've ever seen. I do wish someone had caught even a few minutes of Rigg's Medea on film.

    • @rainespells1273
      @rainespells1273 Před 2 lety +6

      Judith Anderson who played the nurse in this production (and originated this particular Medea) won a Tony for it as well in 1948

    • @jasonlemoine2074
      @jasonlemoine2074 Před 11 měsíci +2

      ​@@clarequilty4962There is a bootleg of her performance!

  • @jerrypeters1157
    @jerrypeters1157 Před rokem +38

    Wow. This play, this performance. It drew me in and captivated my soul to the very end.

    • @musicloverlondon6070
      @musicloverlondon6070 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Euripides was and is a great playwright. All his work is powerful and that's why he's lasted for nigh on 25 centuries.

  • @gregpritchard5800
    @gregpritchard5800 Před 3 lety +124

    In 1984, I took a group of English Literature students to see Ms Caldwell in Medea on stage in Melbourne. A rare privilege; mesmerizing, hypnotic and terrifying, her performance was one of the highlights of my theater memories. Seeing this filmed version, I am reminded of her galvanizing presence on stage and her magnetism in this role. A staggering tribute to a towering talent.

    • @angli3865
      @angli3865 Před 3 lety

      Do you know where is this filmed version from?

    • @gregpritchard5800
      @gregpritchard5800 Před 3 lety

      @@angli3865 The end credits say the Kennedy Centre which means that it must have been in Washington DC. I guess that it would be in the early '80's

    • @Slippin22
      @Slippin22 Před rokem +1

      Me too , had it in my English lit class. Really enjoyed it so much I looked for this video 20 years later .

  • @FaunsAfternoon
    @FaunsAfternoon Před 4 lety +170

    she had me in awe the whole time. I wish Euripides could see it.

    • @ameliastevie7331
      @ameliastevie7331 Před 2 lety +20

      Unfortunately he would probably be upset because during his time, women weren't allowed to act in plays

    • @MultiCamOrange
      @MultiCamOrange Před 3 měsíci +1

      I know, how good is she!! Seeing Greek theatre live is on my bucket list.

  • @silverdandylmao
    @silverdandylmao Před 5 měsíci +11

    The description of how the princess and king died was VISCERAL, such stellar acting too!!

    • @Builder44708
      @Builder44708 Před 4 měsíci +2

      I know. It's just about the most gruesome part of any play I know.

    • @theresagwhite3175
      @theresagwhite3175 Před 14 dny

      always loved that part of the play. Ulitmate paypack

  • @TheMusicalStylingsofBrentBunn

    Whether you're here for school or out of curiosity, I bet you found something special in this classic play :-)

  • @zackcarman7845
    @zackcarman7845 Před 3 lety +122

    Damn school brought me here.

    • @rexterrocks
      @rexterrocks Před 3 lety +8

      You're lucky, at least you get to watch the actual play on CZcams, I did this at school in 1983 and I only had the book. You young people with your electric interphones and your lapbooks have it easy.

    • @KyleSmith-kn1ks
      @KyleSmith-kn1ks Před 3 lety +3

      dude, same here.

    • @RoLee705
      @RoLee705 Před 3 lety +9

      @Paul Evans thank you for paving the way for our unworthy souls.

    • @tammyalderson4511
      @tammyalderson4511 Před 3 lety +1

      LMFAO SAME

    • @oceancity415
      @oceancity415 Před 2 lety

      Me too guy's I have 1 hour to finish my exam thank goodness for this video!😅😜👻

  • @montgomerypowers7205
    @montgomerypowers7205 Před 2 lety +18

    This is maybe the third time I've watched this production since I found this video last year. I really love it. Medea is my favorite ancient character to ponder over.

  • @ajora08861
    @ajora08861 Před 6 lety +91

    Phenomenal actress.

  • @abignothing
    @abignothing Před 8 měsíci +15

    holy shit, this is one of the most powerful performances of a stage production i've ever seen, and i've seen a lot as a theatre person. some people invoke medea as a figure in their witchcraft practice, but im honestly tempted to invoke zoe caldwell😳

    • @ohwell94
      @ohwell94 Před 8 měsíci +1

      It's always been on my bucket list to go to NYC and see a Broadway play
      And frankly I would had sold my soul to have seen Broadway back in the day

  • @alicecoghlan235
    @alicecoghlan235 Před 2 lety +32

    Thank you to Emily for putting up such an important production which realises all the wonderful emotion and drama of this great play. On every count the actors are pitch perfect, complex, conflicted but always narrating. The costume design and use of props is also imaginative, historical and evocative.We are using it for our Wonderland Theatre Bookclub to help emerging playwrights best understand how to write for theatre. I can't recommend this and the Fiona Shaw BBC Abbey Theatre version on youtube to others enough!

  • @-saltedotaku-9444
    @-saltedotaku-9444 Před 3 lety +32

    "I have some things to do that the men will talk about in hushed voices."

    • @lynxb7396
      @lynxb7396 Před 2 lety +2

      Imma start using that phrase when I plan on doin somethin shady

  • @jeffreyarsenault5135
    @jeffreyarsenault5135 Před 4 lety +11

    I saw Miss Anderson in this production in 1982 on Broadway. I visited Miss Anderson in her dressing room. In those days, they let anyone in.

    • @oceancity415
      @oceancity415 Před 2 lety

      The 80s was the most awesome era in History! Everyone was so naturally happy sincere and friendly arcades and horror movies where everywhere and you could smoke ciggerettes inside malls restaurants banks buildings airports jumbo planes etc. I will always miss the ultra awesome 80s!

  • @BS-jy9ul
    @BS-jy9ul Před měsícem +3

    That was the best thing I've watched in a long time. Read the book The Chemical Muse by Dr. DCA Hillman, you will understand how real all of this was to the Greeks. Hail Medea!

  • @kenefdz
    @kenefdz Před 3 lety +17

    At the risk of carbon dating myself, I saw this version when I was a high school senior in 1984. Dame Judith Anderson was a Star Trek fan, btw, and had a very small part in Star Trek: The Motion Picture as a High Priestess of the Khol-i-Nahr on Vulcan. And the "1st Woman of Corinth" (the eldest of the 3 women at the beginning of the play), played an admiral in an episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation. And the actor playing Jason was Will Riker's father in ST TNG. This should be called STAR TREK: THE WRATH OF MEDEA!!!

    • @inkywells
      @inkywells Před 3 lety +1

      Holy crap, that's why they look/sound so familiar!!

  • @lakehayden
    @lakehayden Před 2 lety +6

    I have no words. IF ONLY I was made to watch this in school, my god

  • @luismelendez9521
    @luismelendez9521 Před 5 lety +53

    I have to read this for homework thank you so much for posting this it was so much help

    • @jucii7176
      @jucii7176 Před 3 lety +4

      I have to write an essay on it.

    • @piecesofme8531
      @piecesofme8531 Před 3 lety

      No, you were given the gift of being exposed to this great work of art.

  • @MegaMayday16
    @MegaMayday16 Před 11 měsíci +8

    Its painful to watch if you are from a broken family and if you were hurt in your last relationship and that injustice brought out the worst in you. Really tough to watch

  • @itsaprilmichelle
    @itsaprilmichelle Před 21 dnem

    OMG, I can't believe I finally found this! I was randomly talking about Greek mythology class I took in college with my mom and discussed this play that stuck with me so many years after graduating. She mentioned Medea and I lit up! Lol! Phenomenal performances. ✨️✨️👑👑

  • @MilkyFren
    @MilkyFren Před 3 lety +17

    I like how almost everyone here is here for a school project and I'm just here cuz i heard it was interesting

    • @oceancity415
      @oceancity415 Před 2 lety

      You're here for a school project too dude🤣🤣😜

    • @silverdandylmao
      @silverdandylmao Před 5 měsíci +1

      Same here! I'm just here because I looked up Medea and this came up in my recommended 😂

    • @I-love-your-father
      @I-love-your-father Před 2 měsíci

      I’m in love with Ancient Greece and had only ever read the script before! This was amazing!

  • @jamesbarry1673
    @jamesbarry1673 Před rokem +9

    She makes me cry everytime I see this performance

  • @J70a.m-zg6gi_wha0
    @J70a.m-zg6gi_wha0 Před 3 měsíci +3

    All good stories have more than one ending, and there are actually two ends to Medeas... Euripides version and the lesser-known ending where she does flee to Athens as the citizens of Corinth stone her two boys to death. The citizens of Corinth paid homage to this version by cutting locks from their children's hair and sacrificing them to the spirits of the children. This tradition ended with the sack of Corinth in 146 BC.

  • @genesimring3135
    @genesimring3135 Před 2 lety +19

    The longer I live the more I realize how much great theater I am ignorant of. Why have I never seen this play before? Why have I not known of Zoe Caldwell until after her death?

  • @Gorboduc
    @Gorboduc Před 2 lety +10

    If you didn't know the nurse is played by the great Judith Anderson, who commissioned this translation from Robinson Jeffers and starred in it opposite John Gielgud back in 1947. She also played Mrs Danvers in Rebecca.

    • @JustAPrayer
      @JustAPrayer Před rokem +1

      Wow I didn’t realize that was the same actress. That’s really cool.

    • @ae3898
      @ae3898 Před 10 měsíci

      …and she also portrayed the Vulcan high priestess T’Lar in Star Trek III. I recognized the voice the instant I heard her.

  • @davidls45
    @davidls45 Před 2 lety +12

    Eisenhower Theatre in the Kennedy Center, March 6 (not the 18th) , 1982. Sorry to have to write twice. I’ve never seen this production , and I’m 76 years old. It is.beautiful beyond words. Ancient Greek theatre was filled with stories like this, hate and the rage that leads to ends filled with the overwhelming sorrow of life. Sophocles said it at the very end of Oedipus Rex : “it is better never to have been born. Once born, to die young, before the sorrows and pains of outrageous misfortune overtake you”. Not an exact quote, I read it many years ago.

    • @galaburdakirill2
      @galaburdakirill2 Před rokem +3

      "Not to be born is the best of all things for those who live on earth,
      And not to gaze on the radiance of the keen-burning sun.
      Once born, however, it is best to pass with all possible speed through Hades' gates
      And to lie beneath a great heap of earth."
      It is Theognis, not Sophocles.

    • @diyaghosh1644
      @diyaghosh1644 Před 7 měsíci +3

      Sophocles' words in Oedipus Rex: "Never call a man happy till he is dead".(by the Chorus). Well, this is all I remember

  • @Jerina369
    @Jerina369 Před 2 měsíci +1

    This is brilliant acting and dramatization. I thank this channel!

  • @lobotimiseaha6965
    @lobotimiseaha6965 Před 5 lety +18

    I am reading Morwood translation of Medea..this play adds many new brilliant dialogues to illustrate..From Hong Kong.

  • @setsen337
    @setsen337 Před 4 měsíci +1

    My favourite character in greek tragedy, wonderfully portrayed

  • @aloha3123
    @aloha3123 Před 3 lety +4

    The best actress ever! Amazing.

  • @oceancity415
    @oceancity415 Před 2 lety +5

    I have 1 hour to finish my Medea exam thank's for this video & Happy Halloween all my fellow classmates from all over America and overseas!😂😜👻🕰🎃

  • @cannae216
    @cannae216 Před rokem +5

    I saw this as a teenager in school 30 years ago and never forgot this performance. The all-consuming rage someone could feel... to kill their own children just to spite an ex. Nothing new under the sun.

  • @simonhall8011
    @simonhall8011 Před 4 lety +15

    Best line: 'Loathing is endless' - 1:11:59

  • @ohwell94
    @ohwell94 Před 2 měsíci +1

    With the Judith Andeeson version you can literally feel her spiral into insanity
    This one you can feel the simmering fury and rage and the hatred

  • @animature4929
    @animature4929 Před 4 lety +110

    I think they miss a mature point. She doesn´t kill her children because they look like Jason. She wants to hurt him, but she also kills them because she feels like she has no other choice, since she is affraid the Corinth people will kill them instead. And she hesitates, talks about her real feelings in the monologue before she actually does it. I don´t get why they left that part out.

    • @James-nv9fi
      @James-nv9fi Před 4 lety +18

      Ani Mature a good point. Scholars debate however whether the lines of hesitation are original Euripides or were added in the 4th Century or perhaps even later. I think you can find one source of this discussion either in the introduction to the Oxford World Classics edition of ‘Medea and other plays’ or failing that, the Blackwell Companion to Ancient Greek Drama’. I wish I could be more specific, you raise an important point.

    • @angli3865
      @angli3865 Před 3 lety

      I have a question, do you know were is this from? Is it a movie or a play, and who did it, i can't find anything like this.

    • @animature4929
      @animature4929 Před 3 lety +7

      Angli it’s an Ancient Greek tragedy called Medea. It is a play. 🙂 you can find it easily online if you’d like to read it. I don’t know about this particular inscenation though. 🤔

    • @angli3865
      @angli3865 Před 3 lety

      @@animature4929 I know, but who made this representation?

    • @animature4929
      @animature4929 Před 3 lety

      Angli I think people wrote it in the comments somewhere. I personally don’t know just looked through different interpretations.

  • @James-nv9fi
    @James-nv9fi Před 4 lety +21

    Phenomenal performance. So many interpretations attempt to modernise and end up distracting from the text. This style of spartan (excuse the pun) dress is a perfect balance that I’ve not seen emulated in any other performance. Captivating.

  • @rachelshort614
    @rachelshort614 Před 2 lety +10

    I have just been cast in a production of Medea at my college. I'm playing a member of the Chorus, so I'm doing my research before rehearsals start

    • @rachelshort614
      @rachelshort614 Před 2 lety +1

      @Levi Maynard I start rehearsals next week and I'm super excited! The tech side of things is already in full swing and there's some really exciting things happening on that end of things. We did our measurements for props and costumes these past couple weeks. Our show is in December, so it's a lot of stuff happening in a short amount of time, but I'm excited to see how this project comes to fruition.

    • @oceancity415
      @oceancity415 Před 2 lety +1

      @@rachelshort614 How are you able to memorize all of your line's

    • @rachelshort614
      @rachelshort614 Před 2 lety +3

      @@oceancity415 I'm not supposed to be off book until next Friday, but something that's been helping me is color coding what lines are said by myself and which ones are said together with the rest of the Chorus. There are also moments where we echo each other, so I put those in a different color as well

    • @oceancity415
      @oceancity415 Před 2 lety +1

      @@rachelshort614 That's very cool! I'm doing the same in class we are color coding our line's and also using different colors to change the type of tone we use for every line. Today we just finished Medea. I also wish you the best in life!😁😁👍

  • @rick17345
    @rick17345 Před 3 lety +1

    Wow, what a high school of actors!! I'm in awe....

  • @alexaliebmann9152
    @alexaliebmann9152 Před 3 lety +10

    pov- you’re here for classics and you hate it with your boris johnson looking teacher

  • @talesofadreamer5444
    @talesofadreamer5444 Před 5 lety +6

    Tnk u soo much..i was looking for this movie as it is my course so i need to study this..& now It's become soooo easy for me to memorize this novel❤

  • @h1RED.
    @h1RED. Před 4 lety +46

    Im doing Medea’s first monologue and this is helping me alot

    • @harvestcanada
      @harvestcanada Před 2 lety +2

      I love this version, but I think Euripides would've been appalled, because women were acting in it, ironic as this version, is a woman's story than about Jason. They don't make sequels like that anymore 🤣🤣

  • @conwaylai8562
    @conwaylai8562 Před měsícem +1

    I'm here because the book of stoics say this is an important aspect to recognise in a person - a person without wisdom.

  • @harvestcanada
    @harvestcanada Před 2 lety +5

    Compared to the BBC schools and colleges plays this is superior in quality and skill.

  • @silverdandylmao
    @silverdandylmao Před 5 měsíci +1

    Amazing. I stumbled across this, it's simply amaizng!

  • @sarahmason2946
    @sarahmason2946 Před 3 lety +18

    I'm NOT here for hw... am I alone?

  • @moganaperseus7912
    @moganaperseus7912 Před rokem

    OMG the sound track at the end gives me goosebumps.

  • @prernapatel3679
    @prernapatel3679 Před 2 lety +10

    pov: your taking a high school theatre history class at one of the best arts schools in the USA and she assigned to watch all of this in one night. but you also have 4 finals and a whole scrapbook to finish by 11:59 tonight. its fine

  • @user-gk8vb6dl9l
    @user-gk8vb6dl9l Před rokem +2

    In my rejection and disdain of modernity I've decided to start at the very beginning.

  • @virtualcetacean9813
    @virtualcetacean9813 Před 3 lety +3

    Came to watch after seeing Overly Sarcastic Productions vid on Medea came out.

  • @americalost5100
    @americalost5100 Před 3 lety +2

    Blown away by the story and the acting

  • @emircruzfernandez9199
    @emircruzfernandez9199 Před 3 lety +1

    She is amazing!

  • @homltduk4322
    @homltduk4322 Před rokem +1

    Beautiful absolutely love it 👍

  • @Hipsygirl
    @Hipsygirl Před 11 měsíci +1

    I like that the Chorus was made with a triadic trope (the Maiden, the Mother, & the Crone).

  • @conningdale8805
    @conningdale8805 Před 4 lety +5

    Wonderful performance!

  • @j.o.1516
    @j.o.1516 Před 4 lety +1

    Excellent ! - Thank you very much for posting.

  • @user-sr7fj2tr1g
    @user-sr7fj2tr1g Před 6 měsíci

    Muito bom, excelente!

  • @daniellevelez7236
    @daniellevelez7236 Před 4 lety +4

    please can someone add transcriptions

  • @davidls45
    @davidls45 Před 2 lety +1

    I’ve stopped the credits so that I can read the details. The production opened at the Clarence Brown Theatre, University of Tennessee. February 11, 1982.it then opened at the Eisenhower Theatre Washington, D. C. ,March 18, 1982. I can’t read the very end, I covered it as I typed.

  • @radhika5101
    @radhika5101 Před 2 lety +3

    What a gem.

  • @Graycata
    @Graycata Před 5 dny

    King: what can she do in a day
    The Play: We are going to find out!

  • @ChadLEMcGhie
    @ChadLEMcGhie Před 7 měsíci

    Amazing work!

  • @TheJonesactor
    @TheJonesactor Před 4 lety +3

    Rest In Peace, Zoe Caldwell.

  • @KawakebAstra
    @KawakebAstra Před 2 lety +1

    thx4 post .. happy British Theater 🎭produced The Medea .. but English acting lacks true emotion .. .. it wonderful U posted this great classic

  • @neileardley1907
    @neileardley1907 Před 2 lety

    Thank you Emily ...

  • @juanpablosolorio5056
    @juanpablosolorio5056 Před 5 lety +11

    Eurípides, inmortal

  • @zoyablake9538
    @zoyablake9538 Před 2 lety +1

    Brilliant!

  • @clairerobsin
    @clairerobsin Před 2 lety

    Thank you Emily

  • @MikeMcAughey
    @MikeMcAughey Před rokem +1

    Amazing!

  • @thatssoerin5645
    @thatssoerin5645 Před 24 dny

    What does the Chorus say about what makes love desirable or not desirable?
    pls help

  • @erpthompsonqueen9130
    @erpthompsonqueen9130 Před rokem

    Thank you.

  • @azeljoyportugues2580
    @azeljoyportugues2580 Před 2 lety +3

    I never regret reading it.
    Such a tragedy.

  • @ioncrisu6861
    @ioncrisu6861 Před 4 lety +1

    Bravo !

  • @jayantabarman3151
    @jayantabarman3151 Před 4 lety +6

    I'm currently studying the ending part of Medea

  • @mattphat23
    @mattphat23 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Medea got her karma. She betrayed her father, killed her own brother, and it eventually came back to bite her when Jason decided to forsake her. And then Jason got his karma.

  • @peakperformancetrain
    @peakperformancetrain Před 4 lety +22

    To drink insult like harmless water.

  • @stfuinc.202
    @stfuinc.202 Před 3 lety +4

    that was fantastic

  • @maxbrunette1737
    @maxbrunette1737 Před 2 lety +12

    medea went on to do a bunch of stuff after this she lived a long and full life and was one of the few women in greek myths who doesn't die at the end lol

    • @ThePaganSun
      @ThePaganSun Před 2 lety +4

      Actually, it depends. According to one popular tradition, Theseus (whose real father was Poseidon) drives her to exile or kills her since she was keeping his stepfather (King Aegeus) sick and ruling through him.

    • @Normaschthewanderer
      @Normaschthewanderer Před 11 měsíci

      She also got together with Achilles in the underworld.

  • @abhiramakella7146
    @abhiramakella7146 Před rokem +1

    Act II starts at 47:05.

  • @patod4
    @patod4 Před 2 lety +8

    Zoe Caldwell and Judith Anderson were great with their facial,expressions and voices, other actors too. My question is why, if you are not doing it the Ancient Greek style, with masks and big gestures, why do it this way...half a way...the bodies like Greek columns....no gestures.....just text. Of course the text is beautiful, but gesturing does not distract from the text. For me, this was a production that took it all down to the level of text.
    And I missed like hell the chariot deus ex machina at the end.

    • @jonrutherford6852
      @jonrutherford6852 Před 11 měsíci

      I agree about the deus ex machina. I saw an open-air performance of Medea in Kansas City some years ago, and they had the "authentic" machina at the end: it was hair-raising. In fact the whole performance was so good that I walked away openly weeping. I think I experienced the "catharsis" the Greek playwrights aimed to create in their audiences.

  • @ItsAlexHere4545
    @ItsAlexHere4545 Před rokem +4

    Pov: ur only here to do homework 💀

  • @PabloRodriguez-kw6jx
    @PabloRodriguez-kw6jx Před 3 lety +9

    When she began to scream, the maid should has called 911.

  • @elviswafula3289
    @elviswafula3289 Před 8 měsíci

    Wow,so nice watching this

  • @srisruthi8937
    @srisruthi8937 Před rokem

    I've read that Medea flees in a flying snake chariot in the end, and Aristotle was angry that Euripides portrayed Medea like that since only Gods and Goddesses are shown in the way at the end of plays (the origin of dues ex machine). But I couldn't find that part anywhere on CZcams. So if anyone has seen it, please let me know.

  • @kaylacuva9131
    @kaylacuva9131 Před 4 lety +9

    this plays haunted I stg

  • @Tango27
    @Tango27 Před 3 lety +5

    I am watching because of my daughter has homework 😡😞

  • @idavega-landow7821
    @idavega-landow7821 Před 3 lety +8

    The things women do for love can be as terrible as the things they do for hate.

  • @ayyyitsyagirltab2647
    @ayyyitsyagirltab2647 Před 5 lety +13

    i have to do a prodject on this and im so comfused help me plzzzzzz

  • @raisa_cherry33
    @raisa_cherry33 Před 5 lety +6

    Currently studying this, awesome 👏❤❤❤

  • @ChuckHenebry
    @ChuckHenebry Před 6 měsíci

    What production is this?

  • @lanitewhau5124
    @lanitewhau5124 Před 3 lety +1

    Here for some last minute studying before an exam 👌

  • @baby_no.3936
    @baby_no.3936 Před 3 lety +1

    i dont get it.

  • @xscwens4840
    @xscwens4840 Před 5 lety +11

    I can't even...

  • @nicholasmanila
    @nicholasmanila Před 6 lety +3

    Is this a tv movie or a play?

    • @brendan-kailerlieb4347
      @brendan-kailerlieb4347 Před 6 lety +2

      This was a filmed version of the 1982 Broadway revival. It aired on PBS in 1983.

    • @natashajanjua4769
      @natashajanjua4769 Před 6 lety +1

      Nicholas Miklós Manila its tragic play of Greek era

  • @METALUNICORNLTD
    @METALUNICORNLTD Před rokem

    Thank you for sharing

  • @lindseywitte7913
    @lindseywitte7913 Před 3 lety +1

    My theatre audition brought me here

  • @erggish
    @erggish Před 5 lety +20

    to be honest I didn't feel for Medea in this interpretation... she was portrayed like an evil person indeed...
    However, the first time I read the script I was wondering who was to blame, Jason or Medea?

    • @Kay-dk3jk
      @Kay-dk3jk Před 5 lety +16

      When I first read the script, this is not the way I imagined her to be. But I believe it is a good interpretation. To me, Jason is to blame, but Medea is also ruthless.

    • @PungiFungi
      @PungiFungi Před 5 lety +18

      @@Kay-dk3jk Medea was the direct descendant of Helios, so she was part divine....and mythology have shown there are two set of rules for mortals and immortals. She is allowed to do what most mortal women cannot. And she have her divine heritage (grand daughter of the Sun himself) and magical powers to back it up (she turned Jason's father back into a virile young man and could conceivably do the same for him when the time came). Which is why it is practically out of character for Jason to dump her for someone else who is not even her equal...and for the King and Princess accept Jason when doing so with invite more trouble than its worth.

    • @LunaDelTuna
      @LunaDelTuna Před 5 lety +11

      There's nothing more deadly than a woman scorned
      .
      Even tho she did some pretty fucked up shit before Jason wanted to leave her
      .
      The first red flag for me would've been when she poisoned her entire family and sent her father on the worst scavenger hunt ever to find his sons' body parts sprinkled all over the isle.

    • @lamo1724
      @lamo1724 Před 4 lety +3

      @@LunaDelTuna watching this performance, what rings true is the inhumanity of it all. Everyone had their own agenda; ignoring red flags when there might be something to gain. Ancient Greek tragedies truly reflecting humankind in the 21st century. On a lighter note, 'red flag' always reminds me of that SNL skit :) xxx

    • @KoreaMojo
      @KoreaMojo Před 3 lety

      @@PungiFungi Isn't that often how it is? People leave a good thing in the wrong way for something less valuable on an in-depth level. It's because it's a flaw in the betrayer/fool, not a rational judgement, better opportunity, or a deed done of good will. It's a cheap trick to help the betrayer or fool to forget their deeper problems until the deflection wears off. Sometimes they get bad enough consequences from it pauses their impulsivity long enough to learn a valuable lesson or two. I wonder would Jason ever learn? It's better to be blameless than to invite retaliation because you can't control if the response is commensurate or multiplied.

  • @semihekmen1245
    @semihekmen1245 Před rokem +1

    Who is this woman

  • @jonetommi1671
    @jonetommi1671 Před rokem

    loved it

  • @RespecttheScreenplay
    @RespecttheScreenplay Před 4 lety +2

    Robinson Jeffers
    English translation