Trachiniae
by Sophocles
NATIONAL THEATRE - SUMMER TOUR
Denianeira is waiting in Trachis for the return of her husband Heracles
from battle. Her anxiety is intensified by the fateful prophecy that if
Heracles returns within a certain time then his life thereafter will be
untroubled.
The atmosphere of uncertainty dissolves when the glad
tidings reach Denianeira that Heracles’ homecoming is victorious. As
spoils, he brings with him women captured in Oechalia, the city that he
has conquered and sacked. Among them, Denianeira notices a beautiful and
enigmatic figure. She is distraught to discover that this is Princess
Iole and that Heracles laid siege to Oechalia as a result of his passion
for her. In an attempt to rekindle her husband’s love for her,
Denianeira sends him the gift of a robe smeared with the blood of the
Centaur Nessus. It is a gift, however, that will bring about not
reconciliation, but his painful death.
Once again, the old prophecies reveal their precise meaning after the events that they foretell have come to pass.
Women of Trachis, one of Sophocles’ most neglected plays, was probably staged between 457 and 430 BC.
The
central theme of the play, as reflected in its two-part structure, is
the finite nature of human awareness: the incapability of grasping the
whole, and being able to see only one side of something.
Ignorance
prevents people from having full control of their choices, so that they
become aware of their fate only once it is too late.
Performances:
9, 10 August: Epidaurus
18 August: Dion
24 August: Kavala
27 August: Thessaloniki
30 August: Papagou
2 September: Vyronas
4 September: Elefsina
8 September: Patras
11 September: Petroupoli
13 September: Ilioupoli
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