Reflections of the ''Oresteia'' in the arts and popular culture show the influence of the
classic trilogy of tragedies by
Aeschylus.
Opera, ballet and incidental music
*Several composers have written musical treatments of all or part of Aeschylus's trilogy. From the late 19th century comes
Sergey Taneyev's full-length opera ''
Oresteia''. In the 20th century Soviet composer Yury Alexandrovich Falik composed a one-act ballet ''Oresteia'';
Darius Milhaud supplied incidental music for the plays, the Vienese composer
Ernst Krenek wrote ''
Leben des Orest
''Leben des Orest'' (''The Life of Orestes'') is a grand opera in five acts (eight scenes) with words and music both by Ernst Krenek. It is his Op. 60 and the first of his own libretti with an antique setting. The score is inscribed with the date ...
'' (The Life of Orestes) (1929), and
Iannis Xenakis wrote at least three works for voices and instruments based on the trilogy. There is a one-act opera ''Il furore di Oreste'' by Flavio Testi (from ''The Libation Bearers'') and "Prologue", by
Harrison Birtwistle (from ''Agamemnon''), for
tenor and chamber ensemble.
Mozart
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (27 January 17565 December 1791), baptised as Joannes Chrysostomus Wolfgangus Theophilus Mozart, was a prolific and influential composer of the Classical period (music), Classical period. Despite his short life, his ra ...
's opera ''
Idomeneo'' features
Electra
Electra (; grc, Ήλέκτρα) is one of the most popular mythological characters in tragedies.Evans (1970), p. 79 She is the main character in two Greek tragedies, '' Electra'' by Sophocles and '' Electra'' by Euripides. She is also the centra ...
as a major character. ''
Elektra (opera)'' is a one-act opera by
Richard Strauss
Richard Georg Strauss (; 11 June 1864 – 8 September 1949) was a German composer, conductor, pianist, and violinist. Considered a leading composer of the late Romantic and early modern eras, he has been described as a successor of Richard Wag ...
, first performed at the Dresden State Opera on January 25, 1909. Choreographer Martha Graham created the evening-length dance drama ''Clytemnestra,'' in 1958, giving the ''Oresteia'' a feminist spin. In this version, the murdered queen recalls the events of the trilogy from her point of view, and is absolved of dishonor.
Cinema
*The Italian poet and filmmaker
Pier Paolo Pasolini planned to make a version of the trilogy, set in an unnamed African colony. His goal was to use the Oresteia to comment on the emergence of democracy in Africa; however, during a research expedition captured in the documentary ''
Notes Towards an African Orestes'' (1975), a group of African students objected to the project on the grounds that an ancient European text would have little to say about modern African history and that Pasolini was treating Africa as a single entity and not as a continent of diverse, complex cultures. Pasolini abandoned the project.
*A version of Oresteia, set in modern Greece, is presented in 1975 film ''
The Travelling Players'' by
Theo Angelopoulos. Chrysothemis is an important figure here apart from Clytemnestra, Aegisthus, Agamemnon and Pylades. She was invented by Sophocles as Electra's sister and does not appear in Aeschylus where Iphigeneia is sacrificed. Angelopoulos represents through this tragedy the history of 20th-century Greece, the political turmoils, widespread political violence, fratricide through civil war and foreign intervention.
*The
Spaghetti Western
The Spaghetti Western is a broad subgenre of Western films produced in Europe. It emerged in the mid-1960s in the wake of Sergio Leone's film-making style and international box-office success. The term was used by foreign critics because most o ...
''
Il pistolero dell'Ave Maria'', also known as ''The Forgotten Pistolero'', is based on the myth and set in Mexico following the
Second Mexican Empire
The Second Mexican Empire (), officially the Mexican Empire (), was a constitutional monarchy established in Mexico by Mexican monarchists in conjunction with the Second French Empire. The period is sometimes referred to as the Second French i ...
.
Ferdinando Baldi, who directed the film, was also a professor of classical literature who specialized in Greek tragedy.
Radio
In 2014
BBC Radio 3
BBC Radio 3 is a British national radio station owned and operated by the BBC. It replaced the BBC Third Programme in 1967 and broadcasts classical music and opera, with jazz, world music, Radio drama, drama, High culture, culture and the arts ...
broadcast the entire ''Oresteia'' over the course of three weeks as part of their ''Drama on 3'' series:
*''Agamemnon'' (12 January 2014) adapted by
Simon Scardifield
Simon Scardifield is a British actor and playwright who trained at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama and with Philippe Gaulier, after reading Modern Languages at St John's College, Cambridge.
Scardifield was nominated for a UK Theatre Award ...
, directed by
Sasha Yevtushenko
*''The Libation Bearers'' (19 January 2014) adapted by
Ed Hines
Ed, ed or ED may refer to:
Arts and entertainment
* ''Ed'' (film), a 1996 film starring Matt LeBlanc
* Ed (''Fullmetal Alchemist'') or Edward Elric, a character in ''Fullmetal Alchemist'' media
* ''Ed'' (TV series), a TV series that ran fro ...
, directed by
Marc Beeby Marc or MARC may refer to:
People
* Marc (given name), people with the first name
* Marc (surname), people with the family name
Acronyms
* MARC standards, a data format used for library cataloging,
* MARC Train, a regional commuter rail system of ...
*''The Furies'' (26 January 2014) adapted by
Rebecca Lenkiewicz, directed by
Sasha Yevtushenko
The casts included
Lesley Sharp as Clytemnestra,
Will Howard as Orestes,
Joanne Froggatt as Electra,
Sean Murray Sean Murray may refer to:
* Sean Murray (field hockey) (born 1997), Lisnagarvey player and senior Ireland international
* Sean Murray (footballer, born 1993), Dundalk FC player and Irish youth international
* Sean Murray (Gaelic footballer), Dubli ...
as Aegisthus/Judge,
Georgie Fuller as Iphigenia,
Joel MacCormack Joel or Yoel is a name meaning "Yahweh Is God" and may refer to:
* Joel (given name), origin of the name including a list of people with the first name.
* Joel (surname), a surname
* Joel (footballer, born 1904), Joel de Oliveira Monteiro, Braz ...
as Pylades/Apollo,
Hugo Spear as Agamemnon,
Anamaria Marinca
Anamaria Marinca (born 1 April 1978) is a Romanian actress. She made her screen debut with the Channel 4 film ''Sex Traffic'', for which she won the British Academy Television Award for Best Actress. Marinca is also known for her performance in ...
as Cassandra,
Karl Johnson as Calchas and
Chipo Chung as Athena.
Theatre
*Irish-American playwright, William Alfred, closely based his 1953 verse play "Agamemnon" on the first play of Aeschylus' trilogy.
*English playwright
Steven Berkoff
Steven Berkoff (born Leslie Steven Berks; 3 August 1937) is an English actor, author, playwright, theatre practitioner and theatre director.
As a theatre maker he is recognised for staging work with a heightened performance style eponymously k ...
wrote an adaption of ''
Agamemnon'' in 1977.
*Irish playwright
Marina Carr
Marina Carr is an Irish playwright who has written almost thirty plays, including ''By the Bog of Cats'' (1998).
Early life and education
Carr was born in Dublin, Ireland, but spent the majority of her childhood in Pallas Lake, County Off ...
loosely borrows the plot of the first two parts of the Oresteia in her 2002 play, ''Ariel'', which is set in the contemporary Irish midlands.
*French playwright and philosopher
Jean-Paul Sartre closely based his play ''
The Flies'' (French: ''Les Mouches'') on the Oresteia. He tellingly recreates the intense persecution of Orestes by the Furies, but the reactions of Orestes are transformed by Sartre's
existentialist philosophy mixed with material highly suggestive of rebellion. This undoubtedly because it was written during the
Nazi occupation of France.
*American playwright
Eugene O'Neill based ''
Mourning Becomes Electra'' on the Oresteia. It is likewise composed of three plays, with themes corresponding to Aeschylus' trilogy. It takes place at the end of the
American Civil War as opposed to the Trojan War.
*South African theater artist
Yael Farber based her piece ''Molora'' (Ashes) on the Orestia. She set its themes within the context of the
Truth and Reconciliation Commission hearings of
South Africa in the demise of
apartheid. ''Molora'' was originally produced at the
Market Theatre in Johannesburg.
*
Big Art Group based their participatory serial project
The People (2007) on a retelling of the Oresteia using community and ensemble members in a multimedia performance projected on a public building
*American deaf director
Ethan Sinnott creates the first deaf translation of the Oresteia's ''
Agamemnon'' in 2008. This play was designed specifically for deaf actors to perform for deaf audiences, but also provided captioning for hearing audience members, and makes use of the strong visual-based storytelling of the trilogy of the Oresteia.
*
Northwestern University theater group Sit & Spin Productions produced a show in May 2008 called ''Memory Furies,'' which used video projection to combine elements from the 1959 French New Wave film ''
Hiroshima mon amour'' with the Oresteia.
*
Action To The Word Theatre Company performed Alexandra Spencer-Jones' second world war-time reworking of ''
Agamemnon'' at Camden People's Theatre, London in October 2010 directed by Alexandra Spencer-Jones
*
Action To The Word Theatre Company performed Alexandra Spencer-Jones' 1953 reworking of ''
Agamemnon'' at St Giles In The Field in May 2011 directed by Alexandra Spencer-Jones
*American playwright David Foley created an update of the Oresteia in his play ''The murders at Argos''
*In 2014 MacMillan Films staged the entire Oresteia using Peter Arnott's translation of ''Agamemnon'', ''Libation Bearers'' and ''Eumenides''.
*American director Jonathan Vandenberg conceived and directe
''Oresteia'' an
avant-garde work inspired by Aeschylus' trilogy. It first performed a
Riverside Theatrein 2011. It was presented as part of th
Greek Festivalat
Classic Stage Company in 2015.
Fiction
*The Furies metaphorically plague the character Lily Bart in Edith Wharton's novel ''
The House of Mirth'' and the character
Gwendolen Harleth in George Eliot's ''
Daniel Deronda
''Daniel Deronda'' is a novel written by Mary Ann Evans under the pen name of George Eliot, first published in eight parts (books) February to September 1876. It was the last novel she completed and the only one set in the Victorian society ...
''
* Franco-American novelist
Jonathan Littell draws on ''
The Eumenides'' in his 2006 novel ''
The Kindly Ones''.
*American novelist
Joyce Carol Oates
Joyce Carol Oates (born June 16, 1938) is an American writer. Oates published her first book in 1963, and has since published 58 novels, a number of plays and novellas, and many volumes of short stories, poetry, and non-fiction. Her novels '' Bla ...
took elements of the story and adapted them to the modern day upper-class enclaves of Washington DC in her 1981 novel ''
Angel of Light''.
*British author
J. K. Rowling cites a passage from ''The Libation Bearers'' in the preface of the seventh and final Harry Potter novel, ''
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
''Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows'' is a fantasy novel written by British author J. K. Rowling and the seventh and final novel of the main ''Harry Potter'' series. It was released on 21 July 2007 in the United Kingdom by Bloomsbury Publi ...
''.
*In writing his novel ''
Watership Down'', Richard Adams based both the concept and role of Fiver's character on Cassandra and the role she plays in the first part of the ''Oresteia''. The connection is most evident in the book's first chapter (which is headed by an epigraph from the play), in which Fiver has a vision of his birthplace drenched in blood, echoing Cassandra's doom-laden prophecies which are not seen for what they truly are.
*Galician author
Álvaro Cunqueiro rewrote the story with major changes to the plot (including the ending) in his 1969 novel ''Un hombre que se parecía a Orestes'' (''A man who looked like Orestes'').
*American author
Philip K. Dick
Philip Kindred Dick (December 16, 1928March 2, 1982), often referred to by his initials PKD, was an American science fiction writer. He wrote 44 novels and about 121 short stories, most of which appeared in science fiction magazines during his l ...
was influenced by the Oresteia in creating the premise behind the short story ''Minority Report''.
*American author
Thomas Berger retold the story in his 1990 novel ''Orrie's Story'', setting it in small town America at the close of the Second World War.
*
Neil Gaiman
Neil Richard MacKinnon GaimanBorn as Neil Richard Gaiman, with "MacKinnon" added on the occasion of his marriage to Amanda Palmer. ; ( Neil Richard Gaiman; born 10 November 1960) is an English author of short fiction, novels, comic books, gr ...
's influential graphic novel
Sandman, among many other mythical and classical allusions, includes a major storyline called "The Kindly Ones" roughly based on The Eumenides (which name "the kindly ones" is a direct translation of.)
*The episode "All Great Neptune's Ocean" in
Andromeda (TV series) made explicit reference to Orestes.
* Book One of Thomas Wolfe's autobiographical novel "Of Time and the River" is entitled "Orestes: Flight Before Fury".
* The novel ''House of Names'' by
Colm Tóibín is a retelling of ''The Oresteia''.
Poetry
*Poet
Robinson Jeffers's ''The Tower Beyond Tragedy'' is a modern, verse version of the ''Oresteia'' including references to the World Wars.
*Poet
T. S. Eliot
Thomas Stearns Eliot (26 September 18884 January 1965) was a poet, essayist, publisher, playwright, literary critic and editor.Bush, Ronald. "T. S. Eliot's Life and Career", in John A Garraty and Mark C. Carnes (eds), ''American National Biogr ...
's play ''
The Family Reunion
''The Family Reunion'' is a play by T. S. Eliot. Written mostly in blank verse (though not iambic pentameter), it incorporates elements from Greek drama and mid-twentieth-century detective plays to portray the hero's journey from guilt to red ...
'' is based on ''The Eumenides.''
*Poet
Sylvia Plath's poem ''The Colossus'' alludes to the blue sky of the ''Oresteia''.
Popular song
''La Tragedie d'Oreste et Electre'' Album by British band The
Cranes (band)
Cranes are a British rock music, rock band formed in 1985.
History
Formed in 1985Bite Back interview 1989 in Portsmouth, England by siblings Alison and Jim Shaw and named after the many mechanical crane (machine), cranes around the city's docks ...
which is a musical adaptation of
Jean-Paul Sartre's
The Flies.
* Popular singer
Monica Richards
Monica Vivienne Richards (born May 24, 1965) is an American singer, songwriter, artist and author. A graduate of the American University with honors in literature and a minor in anthropology, she is considered to be an icon of the goth subcultu ...
of
Faith and the Muse has based work in the play. Specifically, "The Chorus of the Furies" which appears on the album ''
Evidence of Heaven
''Evidence of Heaven'' is the third studio album by Faith and the Muse.
Track listing
Credits
*All instruments and voices performed by William Faith and Monica Richards (except "Joy")
*All titles composed by Faith and the Muse © and p Elyrian ...
'' by Faith and the Muse references this story.
*
A Perfect Circle's debut album, ''
Mer de Noms
''Mer de Noms'' (French for ''"Sea of Names"'') is the debut studio album by American rock band A Perfect Circle. The album was released on May 23, 2000, and entered the ''Billboard'' 200 at No. 4, making it the highest ever ''Billboard'' 200 de ...
'', includes a track titled "Orestes". The lyrics written by
Maynard James Keenan are recognisable as referring to the ancient fable; the chorus states "
've
A contraction is a shortened version of the spoken and written forms of a word, syllable, or word group, created by omission of internal letters and sounds.
In linguistic analysis, contractions should not be confused with crasis, abbreviations ...
got to cut away, clear away, snip away and sever this
umbilical
Umbilical may refer to:
*Umbilical cable
*Umbilical cord
*Umbilical fold
*Umbilical hernia
*Umbilical notch
*Umbilical vessels
**Umbilical artery
**Umbilical vein
*Umbilical zone
*The Umbilical Brothers, two Australian comedic performers, David a ...
residue
hat'skeeping me from killing you."
*
Virgin Steele based two
concept album
A concept album is an album whose tracks hold a larger purpose or meaning collectively than they do individually. This is typically achieved through a single central narrative or theme, which can be instrumental, compositional, or lyrical. Som ...
s on the Oresteia.
* Two of German power metal group
Blind Guardian's songs from their seventh album
A Night at the Opera, Under the Ice and
And Then There Was Silence
"And Then There Was Silence" is a song by German power metal band Blind Guardian. It was released in November 2001 as the lead single from their album '' A Night at the Opera''.
Written by singer Hansi Kürsch and composed by Kürsch and guitar ...
are centered around Cassandra, though Under the Ice is the only one of the two based specifically on the events of The Orestia.
Visual arts
*
Three Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion
''Three Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion'' is a 1944 triptych painted by the Anglo-Irish people, Irish-born British artist Francis Bacon (artist), Francis Bacon. The canvasses are based on the Erinyes, Eumenides—or Furies—of ...
, a 1944 triptych painted by artist
Francis Bacon, is based on the Eumenides—or Furies.
* Francis Bacon painted ''
Triptych Inspired by the Oresteia of Aeschylus
''Triptych Inspired by the Oresteia of Aeschylus'' is a 1981 oil-on-canvas triptych painting by Francis Bacon (painter), Francis Bacon. It is one of 28 List of large triptychs by Francis Bacon, large triptych paintings by Bacon, each comprisin ...
'' (1981).
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Oresteia
Classical mythology in popular culture