AEF2025: Electra
The Athens Epidaurus Festival is celebrating its 70th anniversary and has begun rolling out its special anniversary programme. The first announcements cover the second leg of the festival, the performances at the Ancient Theatre of Epidaurus, also known as Epidavria.
Caravans of Athenians embark on this cultural rite of passage, travelling on summer weekends to experience a performance at this historic amphitheatre, which seats almost 14,000 people. Plan ahead, and you could be among them.
Once seated, you’ll feel the anticipation of thousands around you. As the sun sets behind the orchestra—the circular stage—the chatter fades, leaving only the hum of cicadas and the distant calls of nightbirds. Then, a hush falls. Sometimes, you might even hear the actors' footsteps as they approach, just as they did 2,600 years ago.
This year’s Epidavria continues this tradition with eight performances, seven of which are world premieres. You can check out what’s been announced so far by clicking here.
As part of the Contemporary Ancients series, the Festival will showcase innovative and modern interpretations of ancient tragedies, performed at the Little Theatre of Epidaurus, offering a fresh perspective on timeless works. Read more about this here.
Open to visitors throughout the festival, the exhibition Antigone: Law and Disobedience traces the play’s evolution over 70 years at Epidaurus, featuring rare items from the Festival’s archive, along with photographs, costumes, models, and audiovisual material from Greece and abroad.
Dimitris Tarlow makes his directorial debut at Epidaurus with a powerful new staging of Sophocles' Electra. Set in a world consumed by totalitarianism and social injustice, this production explores how violence and revenge are often justified as "necessary evils", bringing a poignant and timely message to the stage.
Set in Argos, a few years after the Trojan War, the play follows Electra and her brother Orestes in their relentless pursuit of justice. Seeking vengeance for the murder of their father, Agamemnon, at the hands of their mother, Clytemnestra, and her lover, Aegisthus, they navigate a world shaped by fate, duty, and retribution.
A character defined by deep grief and unrelenting thirst for vengeance, Electra not only fights for justice but also challenges traditional gender roles and societal expectations, adding even more complexity to her already compelling story.
Info
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Preis: TBA
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Datum: -
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Time: 9 pm
- The Ancient Theatre of Epidaurus, Epidaurus, 210 52
- +30 275 302 2026
- Website