Synopsis Hotel Medea is back! Developed, updated and on tour - if you couldn't get a ticket at the Arcola last year and can't catch it in Brazil this spring, don't miss it this July in its site-specific reincarnation as part of LIFT, starting from the North Greenwich Pier (formally the QEII Pier) at the O2. A provocative interpretation of the dark revenge myth of Medea, running from midnight till dawn with a live sound score by DJ Dolores. Hotel Medea is an overnight production in three parts. Tickets are available for Part I only (11.30pm - 1.30am) or the complete triology (11.30pm - approx 5.30am). Part I: Zero Hour Market: The Meeting and Marriage of Jason and Medea performed to a live DJ set. A maze of blood, food and dance turns into a frenzied battle for the Golden Fleece. Part II: Drylands: a post-modern wasteland. Live documentary, hot chocolate and CCTV cameras add a fresh perspective to Jason's betrayal. Part III: Feast of Dawn: a harrowing voyage through the landscape of Medea's mind with paparazzi chases, burning brides and a twisted game of hide and seek. Part I: Zero Hour Market: The Meeting and Marriage of Jason and Medea performed to a live DJ set. A maze of blood, food and dance turns into a frenzied battle for the Golden Fleece. Part II: Drylands: a post-modern wasteland. Live documentary, hot chocolate and CCTV cameras add a fresh perspective to Jason's betrayal. Part III: Feast of Dawn: a harrowing voyage through the landscape of Medea's mind with paparazzi chases, burning brides and a twisted game of hide and seek. A site-specific performance leaving by boat from the QEII Pier at the O2 (North Greenwich).
Whisked away on a boat to the seemingly isolated Trinity Buoy Wharf at eleven o’clock at night, there’s definitely something adventurous about the prospect of Hotel Medea. As other shows bring their curtains down, Medea’s tale is just warming up and it’s going to be a long night.
Beginning at nearly midnight with the raucous Zero Hero Market and ending in the eerie dawn of 5.30am with a shared breakfast, Hotel Medea is as much about exploring one’s capacity to experience performance in extreme conditions as it is the tragic myth of its namesake. Or at least it should be, puzzlingly this production seems more interested in self-indulgent set ups than placing the audience’s nocturnal experience at the centre of their work. This Medea could be done at anytime making the whole event seem slightly gimmicky.
Indeed this is a strangely conventional telling of the story of Medea. Whilst we are taken by the hand through a number of rooms and experiences and asked to play a number of roles it is always in a passive fashion; we feel a little like human props for the actors to manipulate and there’s no communion in that.
The only point when we are all near a moment of common experience is at the Zero Hero Market. It is the most successful part of this trilogy charting Jason and Medea’s wooing and wedding, and incidentally the only section one can do on its own. Whipping themselves and the audience up into a frenzy of Brazilian urban beats and swirling choreography we are all swayed into this strange ritual.
But this dynamic is broken with the first of two intervals in between each section which feel like church hall tea parties and ruin any sense of cohesive tension during the performance.
For all this you can’t fault the dedication of the cast (who work faithlessly in the face of an ‘ensemble’ that is clearly only really about PJM’s Medea) and the uniqueness of attending an all night performance is certainly compelling. It’s not quite enough however. For project leaders PJM and Jorge Lopes Ramos, Hotel Medea has been a work in progress for the last three years but it still seems to have a long way to go. Maybe it’s time to put this one to bed and move on to a more audience-led over night experience.
I totally agree with this review, it hits the nail on the head. For those of us used to this non naturalistic kind of theatre, while there are a few good ideas, it does have a long way to go even after so long in the making and does seem very self endulgent. But to those used to theatre as being Andrew Lloyed Webber and west end dull productions this production will be a revelation. But to those people, there is much better and more sophisticated work out there. Try Punch Drunk, DreamThinkSpeak, or Polish company Teatr ZAR for a more genuine non realistic theatre experience. - Violet
17 Aug 10
Honour Bayes review simply and utterly misses the point. Ignore it and go see Hotel Medea for yourself. Its fantastic. - M.Jenns
01 Aug 10
Worth the sleepless night. I can't stop dreaming about it since I saw it 2 weeks ago... - Giulliana Pat
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