Theatre Fairfield and Antigone:
Sophokles’s Antigone
in a new translation by Anne Carson
Global Theatre: A Performance Series
Directed by Dr. Martha S. LoMonaco
October 25-28 & October 28-29
October
25 – 29
2017
8:00 P.M. & 2:00 P.M.
$15 | $5 Fairfield University students
Quick Center
“you big men with your big words
pay a big price for that
but in the end
you learn wisdom too
even you”
Antigone boldly speaks truth to power, instigating a battle of wills with her uncle, King Kreon, who condemns her to death and destroys his family. Carson’s refreshing translation brings Sophokles’s classic tragedy into the present day.
21st Century Women and Ancient Greek Tragedy
Curated by Martha S. LoMonaco, Katherine A. Schwab, and Sara Brill
Antigone, Iphigenia, Medea―some of the most captivating figures in western drama―are title roles in ancient Greek tragedies. These formidable characters were wholly the creation of men since women could not write plays nor perform in public during the Golden Age of Greek Theatre in the 5th century B.C.E. On stage, these women, originally played by male actors, enjoyed central roles but, like their real life counterparts, were vulnerable and held no power outside the home. Yet, their power as characters has enthralled audiences for 25 centuries and has inspired women, and anyone who has struggled to gain rights and privileges throughout the world, to acts of great courage and determination.
21st Century Women and Ancient Greek Tragedy is sponsored by the Fairfield University Humanities Institute.