

Euripides Plays: 1
Euripides
Two plays by the acclaimed Irish author: an adaption of Euripides and an “emotionally bruising drama” of three women obsessed with the same man (The New York Times).
Triptych
With searing acuity, O’Brien presents the story of three women—a mistress, a wife, and a daughter—who are all helplessly drawn to Henry: their lover, husband, and father.
While Henry himself never appears, his specter is never absent as these women confront the ways that love can simultaneously liberate and entrap.
Triptych is a powerful work that explores sex, marriage, and predatory relationships.
Iphigenia
In this modern take on the Greek tragedy, O’Brien takes creative license with Euripides’s tale of a daughter sacrificed for the sake of war.
This taut, contemporary version presents, in O’Brien’s own words, “a more equal representation of the power and presence of both male and female characters” (Edna O’Brien, Independent, UK).
“Intriguingly original... emotionally brave and engagingly clever.”
–R. Hurwitt, The San Francisco Chronicle
Triptych is a Irish play written by Edna O'brien and published by Grove Press in New York (2003).
Digital editions available on Amazon Kindle, Apple Books, Google Play (eISBN 9780802199133).
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