Euripides’ HERAKLES: Greek Tragedy with Ancient Music
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- Опубликовано: 9 фев 2025
- Barnard Columbia Ancient Drama presents the first modern staging of a Greek tragedy in the original language with a full score of ancient Greek music for a reconstructed aulos, the double reed wind instrument that originally accompanied the dramas in ancient Athens. Euripides’ “Herakles” was first performed around 416 BCE at the City Dionysia festival. It tells the story of Herakles’ madness and slaughter of his household as the culmination of his heroic labors. This staging of “Herakles” with ancient Greek music shows how the sound of the aulos breaks into the play’s dramatic action to control Herakles’ body as it choreographs his ruin.
Please note, this performance is in the original ancient Greek. Subtitles can be switched on in English through the Closed Caption icon on the toolbar. Ancient Greek, Italian, and Chinese subtitles are coming soon!
Performed April 4-6th, 2019 in Minor Latham Playhouse in New York City. Since 1977, BCAD has produced an annual ancient drama in the original Greek or Latin in memory of Matthew Alan Kramer.
Directed with Executive Production by Caleb Simone
Assistant Direction by Rachel Herzog and Elizabeth McNamara
Produced by Caitlin Morgan
Melody composed by Anna Conser
Aulos accompaniment composed and performed by Callum Armstrong
Aulos reconstructed based on the Megara & Elgin models by Robin Howell
Choreography by Jon Froehlich with Samuel Humphreys
Videography by Dancing Camera, Brooklyn
Sound Design and Audio Edit by Matt Rocker, Underground Audio NYC
Set Design by Cate McCrea
Lighting Design by 22 Lighting Studio
Costume Design by Bo Yeon Jang with Allegra Forbes
Props by Eastern Wind Studio
With support from:
The Matthew Alan Kramer Fund
The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation
The Onassis Foundation USA
A Barnard College Presidential Award
Barnard Alumna Marietta Voeglis (1954)
You fullfiled my 23 years dream of seeing and hearing it in the original language amd with music, since I studied some greek at university. I am going back to it thanks to you. Just think the actors should have their names on, so their incredible effort can be recognized.
deez
deez
deez
deez
You say what I was intending to say! I have studied Koine Greek, but have since wandered into Classical Greek - but not enough - not enough at all, as I realise after watching this.
Thank you to all who made with gift available to us,
what an awesome experience you gave me!!! I've never thought hearing a play in Ancient Greek (that I'm studying at the university). I'm so grateful! At this moment, I'm studying Greek Theater - and had to read Heracles. The emotion you passed me will motivate me to go deep in it. Thanks again...
I cannot thank you enough for posting this. You are really helping me in my quest to learn more about Greek tragedy.
I cannot tell you how much I love and appreciate this video. The Bacchae is my all time favorite Greek text and I really wanted a Greek recording. The phenomenal Greek instruments and performances are a bonus :) PLEASE keep making these!
It was such a pleasure to see this. I will probably watch many times more. I thank you so much!
PLEASE upload Ancient Greek subtitles it would be very very appreciated :)
Yep, would have been more pedagogically useful than English.
I liked your work very much! I hope italian subtitles will be ready as soon as possible.
I learn ancient Greek in Rome, Italy, and Herakles is my favorite tragedy.
could you describe the costume, acting, and the props of this scene? pls reply its for my school assignment😁❤️
Eracle (in generale Euripide) >>>>>
fascinating, looking forward to more! Amazing sound Callum, you are the master Aulos player!
Just brilliant! Many thanks.
would love to hear about how they learned and memorized the dialogue
Really good work. It's really impressive how you speak ancient Greek.
So cool, I'm going to show my professors and colleagues at university.
this is incredible, hope I can get into Barnard this year💙
Apparently this play is the oldest written chronicle of Herakles journey (something other than a brief vague overview or singular event). So while most view the order (murder of family after the labors) to be a creative interpretation, it's possible this was the original narrative before Christianity began to spread in Rome. You guys should perform this every year, it's a crucial piece of ancient greek mythology and would totally distinguish your theater group (and yes an update with better audio/video would be nice for posterity).
Amazing, bravo!
The music at around 50 minutes in is remarkably similar to a part of Queen's "Bohemian Rhapsody" (the "I'm just a poor boy" sequence). Throughout our history there seems to be a commonality of the purpose, mood, and sound of music, and this would seem to be an interesting example.
Acabei de ler o livro, e vim assistir essa incrível peça teatral, parabéns! 👏
Subtitles can be switched on in the RUclips player toolbar through the "CC" (Closed Captions) icon. Subtitles in English are currently available and Italian, Chinese, and the original Ancient Greek are planned.
It's still not available :(
Still no available 😢
Please, try to offer subtitles in Portuguese too, ok?
Shit...now I have to learn Greek
You could, but you'd need to start learning the modern language first, (imagine trying to learn Old English without knowing modern English; it would be tough) and, it wouldn't help much with understanding these actors before years of study... Also, these people are speaking "ancient Greek" as best as they can, but they are not Greek, so it's kind of like listening to a modern Chinese person trying to speak Old English; almost unrecognizable to modern-native speakers.
@@giuseppelogiurato5718 Respectfully, Giuseppe, following your analogy, ancient Athenian performers would likely be as unrecognizable to modern Greek ears as an Old or Middle English bard in Trafalgar Square today. If your goal is to read the surviving texts of Ancient Greek drama in the original, studying Ancient "Attic" Greek directly is the best route, though modern Greek is certainly worth studying in it's own right!
@@giuseppelogiurato5718 The actors speak ancient Greek in the Erasmian way that pronounces EVERY LETTER and can be understood better at lower playback speed of 0.75%
Wonderful, but I don't know Greek. Would y'all please post subtitles, so the unlettered can enjoy this as well?
There are subtitles if you hit the CC button.
I love that I finally get to see a free online production in the original language with reconstructed music, but I feel like the heavy British style inflection and intonation in many parts takes me out a bit. Though I guess I don't really know much Greek to tell, but I thought it's supposed to sound similar to the Spanish accent. Does anyone who knows Greek well enough tell me how accurate it is?
No offense but if Euripides let his actors sing like that he never would have been let on the stage
What do you mean?
hi sa classmates ko :) sana kaya niyo pa
Audio is shit. Sorry I wanted to watch this too. Cool that you guys did this tho. Very cool.
Nevermind
isnt it hercules
It is a well done piece. Although I would rather have Ancient Greek pronounced in the Modern Greek way (I prefer to believe in the natural evolution of the language rather than a reconstructed hypothetical pronunciation by Renassaince scholars who idealized the ancients). The music is also well done, the instrumentals stand out.
im greek and i cant understand what they are saying and thats due to the fact that greek probably isnt their first language but still its good
Modern Greek pronunciation is quite different from Ancient :)
Oh you, little child...
@@discogoth and this one is different from both :)
Yeah, it sounds VERY weird... It's all, "Oi hoi, gow how, ü hü, ay hay"... Almost like a cross between Greek and Swedish, but with an English accent and cadence... It's still a beautiful show, but some of the pronunciation make me giggle.
@@giuseppelogiurato5718 They butchered it lmao.
Oh paras mapeh
I love how this is a slap in the face to Euripides, Aeschylus, and the other Athenian playwrights; since their casts were all men and this one is mostly female!
Prrformia play should never be "a slap in the face" of its creator.
Only someone with a chip on its shoulder thinks that way...
And why have a woman play the male lead?
It's a women's school---otherwise, I would be totally against it. Ya know, they do Hercules, it comes with the territory.
@@SK-iz7bc Right, fair then
Unwatchable.
Or course to be more authentic maybe masks? Oh and no women.
It is really bizarre to have women playing masculine roles. Hard to watch.
at first I thought this way, but they are so good that it had no importance to me. However, emember that in the past, men played women roles, I think that was more bizarre than the opposite.
Agreed.
@@silviamunoz6863 yeah but this is a reenactment of an ancient play. It's being sold as such, being in the original language and everything, so everything should be as it was when it was originally performed.
@rustybayonette6641 Well, in that case, you have to search for greek actors, not students. They did great!
@@silviamunoz6863 They certainly did. My point still stands. They could have found male performers
A nice way to ridicule Ancient Greek Language. Disgusting.
Why? It is performed in the original Greek.
@@SaraW936 Don't mind him, he sounds like a fascist Golden Dawn piece of shit and that's what he probably is.
@@masterg6218Don't descend to a level even lower than DK's level, Master G. You both can do better than this.
Dale Nelson No reason to be nice to fascists :)
If you are speaking the truth, please give us detailed explaination in ancient Greek.