Synopsis Hecuba is a moving, bitter tragedy about the interrelations between those who hold power and those who suffer it. It is the slaughter of Hecuba's daughter Polyxena and the discovery of the body of her son Polydorus which leads to Hecuba's progress from grief to despair, as confronted by her tormentors, she is forced to yield her dignity, her values and her self-respect. Her humanity destroyed, she takes revenge so hideously brutal, she is transformed into "the bitch of Cyrossema"
Having run the country for seven years, Tony Blair now seems ready to take over our theatres. After a star part in David Hare's Stuff Happens, there are any number of characters in the Donmar's Hecuba ready and eager to reassure others that they are doing things `because it's right'.
Moral self-righteousness is rife. There's Tim Piggot-Smith's slightly weak-kneed, sharp-suited general, Agamemnon, unwilling to condemn a man who has terribly betrayed a friendship by murdering the son of friends entrusted to him because, he says, `the army would not stand for that'.
Meanwhile, Finbar Lynch's Polymestor tries to put a reasonable gloss on things, admitting, yes, he killed young Polydorus, Hecuba and Priam's son, out of greed but also because had he lived, he'd have been a threat to peace. Even Odysseus, who comes to take Polyxena, Hecuba's daughter, for sacrifice, says "I mean well...I am not your enemy", whilst Hecuba, probably second only to Medea as a figure of infamy - she blinds one man and kills his two young sons - does so for that most articulate and understandable of arguments: revenge.
All of which makes Hecuba sharply relevant for our own troubled times. (Mo wonder we shall also be seeing Vanessa Redgrave rising to the challenge in the spring with the Royal Shakespeare Company.) Two-thousand-five-hundred years on from Euripides' great anti-war tract, we are still grappling with similar problems: never-ending conflicts, cycles of blood-letting, self-deluding rationalisations for it.
Frank McGuinness' marvellous new translation shows how to be modern without ever being meretricious. A grieving mother, who has lost everything to war - home, husband, identity and now two children - could be any parent staring out from recent newspapers from Iraq to Ramallah, Beslan to Darfur. Or indeed Belfast. Euripides, however, goes one step further. Hecuba, brutalised, turns brute, victim becomes perpetrator.
As always with Jonathan Kent productions, visually it's hugely impressive. With designer Paul Brown's steep, sloping sand dune, dark, brick wall covered with a roll call of names, shimmering water (from which, like Kent's Almeida Tempest effect, Eddie Redmayne's Polydorus mysteriously rises) and a soundscape alternating between almost subliminal heartbeats and ocean surf, the sense of imminent horror is palpable, elemental.
But Susan Engel's one-woman Chorus is a let-down and the studiedly modern-dress somehow detracts rather than adding to the production's contemporary impact. No qualms about Clare Higgins' Hecuba, a towering performance in which every moment registers, at first unutterable despair turning to invincibility in revenge. Awesome.
If there was a 10, I would give that score to this dazzling production which is one of the very finest renditions of Greek drama that I have seen. Claire Higgins provides an astonishingly emotionally raw performance. She is devastating. But all the cast are remarkable - Eddie Redmayne and Nicholads Day in particular are devastating. The images from this play will haunt me forever. - 80.177.231.164)
07 Nov 04
Clare Higgins is magnificent as Hecuba - a mesmerising, moving, devastating performance. The supporting cast, including Finbar Lynch and Tim Pigott-Smith, are excellent... and the lovely Eddie Redmayne (surely, a young star in the making) has one of the most impressive stage entrances I've ever seen. Having said that, I was in the front row and literally two feet from him. If you can find a ticket, you won't be disappointed. - 193.130.127.205)
19 Oct 04
i saw this last night ad would say it was truly a fantastic show. the cleaver language conversion mixed well with the modernisation of the set and minimalisation of the chorus to a solitary person. the performances were gripping and the wall covered in dead names really captured the esence of the desperation throughout. well donw to all. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (195.195.42.126)
09 Oct 04
I'm not really a fan of Greek tragedies, but this was utterly gripping. I personally loved the staging and felt the minimalist use of cast and stage was very powerful and added to the intesity of the whole experience. To bring an ancient play so seemingly effortlessly into a modern context is no mean feat and this version of Hecuba will be a hard act to follow... - USER: Whatsonstage.com (212.158.200.86)
07 Oct 04
If you have a fondness for Greek tragedy, you'll love this production. If you're a more casual fan, like me, however, it's nothing special. The design is stunning, the direction superb, just as we would expect from a Kent/Brown production. But I can't help feeling that the performances (with the exception of Alfred Burke and Susan Engel, who were both lovely to watch) were somewhat monotonous and uninspiring. I suppose the night is spoilt if you decide that you don't like Hecuba, and I didn't. Clare Higgins was impressive and deserved the large round of applause, but that's as far as it went for me. After half an hour she really started to grind at my patience. I know she played a desperately distraught woman, but there was no need for the constant heavy breathing and the often forced grief. It just never seemed natural (except, perhaps, when she grieved over her son). I'd like to have seen a more varied performance. Another thing I was hoping for was a large chorus, because the set was just asking for it - but, alas, Kent tormented us by just providing one old woman. Overall, it was good, but irritating in places and certainly nothing special in my opinion.BH - USER: Whatsonstage.com (195.92.194.18)
30 Sep 04
This is a 2500-year old play staged and performed with as much freshness and relevance as any newly written drama - and a hell of a lot better than most. The design and staging are stunning and all of the performances deserve high praise - but I have to single out Clare Higgins, whose performance as Hecuba will forever stand out in a lifetime of theatre-going and is a real privilege to witness. Harrowing. Devastating. Thrilling.
- USER: Whatsonstage.com (195.232.16.14)
28 Sep 04
Harrowing, resonant and brilliant in every respect. A rollercoaster ride for the emotions, you walk out after less than an hour and a half completely drained. As powerful and succinct a consideration of the human condition as one is likely to see. Adaptor, director designer and cast all in perfect harmony. A gem for those with a strong stomach and a hard act to follow for the RSC. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (80.168.23.114)
Re-opened in 1992. Seats 254. 1999 - Ambassador Theatre Group takes over from the Associated Capital Theatres as the landlord of the Donmar Warehouse. 2002 - Michael Grandage succeeds Sam Mendes as Artistic Director of the Donmar. Nick Frankfort succeeds Caro Newling as Executive Producer.
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