

Medea (Theatre Babel version)
Euripides
From the imagination of Charles Ludlam and the Ridiculous Theatrical Company comes a comic adaptation of the timeless tragedy by Euripides reinterpreted in the inimitable style of this classically farcical company.
"A succinct deconstruction, not a broad parody, and its laughter derives less from mocking Greek tragedy than from ruthlessly and insightfully exposing its conventions... Medea is at its best when rudely pointing up the continuity between Euripides and Hollywood melodramatists of the 1930's and 1940's."
— The New York Times
"Delightfully zany... Homage is paid to the classical tragedy without compromising the integrity of Ludlam's high camp vision."
— Downtown
"Ludlam has converted the play into a boisterous tragicomedy that's over in less than an hour, yet retains not only the basic plot about a murderous mother, but such key Euripidean concerns as the fragility of democracy, the whimsy of the gods, and Medea's status as a stranger in a strange land... Ridiculous? You bet. And also a near perfect example of its enduringly mischievous breed. Ludlam lives."
— Christian Science Monitor
The Ridiculous Theatrical Company Presents Medea is a American comedy play written by Charles Ludlam and published by Samuel French in New York (1988).
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