The Cambridge Greek Play is a play performed in Ancient Greek by students and alumni of the University of Cambridge, England. The event is held once every three years and is a tradition which started in 1882 with the Ajax of Sophocles.
The history of the early years may be found in P. E. Easterling's The Early Years of the Cambridge Greek Play: 1883-1912.
Among famous names involved in those early days were Rupert Brooke as the Herald in Aeschylus' Eumenides (1906), Sir Hubert Parry as the composer of incidental music to Aristophanes' The Birds (1883) - the Bridal March is still used in weddings - and Ralph Vaughan Williams as composer of incidental music to The Wasps, also by Aristophanes (1909). More recently, actor Tom Hiddleston played Orestes in Sophocles' Electra in 2001.
The Cambridge Greek Play is now hosted in the historic Cambridge Arts Theatre.
Video Cambridge Greek Play
Recent performance history
- Antigone (Sophocles play) by Sophocles and Lysistrata by Aristophanes, (2016)
- Prometheus Bound attributed to Aeschylus and Frogs by Aristophanes, (2013)
- Agamemnon by Aeschylus, (2010)
- Medea by Euripides, (2007)
- Oedipus the King by Sophocles, (2004)
- Electra by Sophocles, (2001)
- The Trojan Women by Euripides, (1998)
Maps Cambridge Greek Play
References
External links
- Cambridge Greek Play 2013
- Full Performance History
Source of article : Wikipedia