Phèdre
by Jean Racine

Phèdre Book Cover
Phèdre Cover

Highlights

Synopsis

A lean, high-tension version of a classic tragedy.

The myth of Phaedra is one of the most powerful in all of classical mythology.

As dramatized by the French playwright Jean Racine (1639-99), the dying Queen's obsessive love for her stepson, Hippolytus, and the scrupulously upright Hippolytus' love for the forbidden beauty Aricia has come to be known as one of the great stories of tragic infatuation, a tale of love strong enough to bring down a kingdom.

In this "tough, unrhyming avalanche of a translation" (Paul Taylor, The Independent)

, Hughes replaces Racine's alexandrines with an English verse that serves eloquently to convey the passions of his protagonists.

The translation was performed to acclaim in London in 1998, and the London production, starring Diana Rigg, was staged in 1999 at the Brooklyn Academy of Music.

"We are still catching up with Ted Hughes's gift for narrative verse after his Tales from Ovid

," one English critic observed after the London premiere.

"Little needs to happen on stage when there's a swirling action-packed disaster movie-riddled with sex and violence-in Hughes's free verse."

Publication

Publisher Faber & Faber
Year 2000
Binding Paperback
Pages 96
Place New York
Language English
ISBN-13 9780374526160
ISBN-10 0374526168
LCCN 98074825
LCC PQ1898 .A34 1999

Phèdre is a French play written by Jean Racine and published by Faber & Faber in New York (2000).

Community Reviews

No community reviews yet

Rating

3.7

21k ratings · 310 reviews

Review

Buy Play

Similar Plays

Plays with similar themes, style, and content.

More from Jean Racine

More plays from Jean Racine that we think you'll enjoy.