Η φάρμα των ζώων – Η παράσταση αρχίζει!
Practical Information
| Date | Monday 2 March |
|---|---|
| Time | 11:30 |
| Price | €12 |
| Tickets | Buy tickets |
| Venue | Μέγαρο Μουσικής Αθηνών (Ilisia) |
| Address | Vassilissis Sofias Avenue & Kokkali 1, Athens 115 21 |
I Farma ton Zoon — I Parastasi Archizei is a children's theater adaptation of George Orwell's Animal Farm at the Music Library Lilian Voudouri in Megaron Mousikis, central Athens, playing Sundays at 11:30. Three performers and a musician share a small teaching hall, and the puppets arrive before the politics do.
Directed and adapted by Michalis Kilacos and Panos Christodoulou, the production reframes Orwell's 1945 allegory as interactive theater with live music composed by Vasilis Tzavaras and lyrics by Elissaios Vlachos. The farm animals — realized through puppets built by Dimitra Konstantinidou and costumes by Anna Sapka — discover their owner has been exploiting them, revolt, and then face the harder question: what comes after the revolution. The adaptation targets ages three to nine, but it earns that range by simplifying without softening. The pigs still consolidate power. The promises still erode.
The Sunday morning audience at Megaron's Music Library assembles in family clusters — parents who want their children to encounter stories with weight, grandparents who remember what the original allegory was actually about, and children who experience the betrayal before they have the vocabulary for it.
The Music Library Lilian Voudouri sits adjacent to the main Megaron building on Vasilissis Sofias, a compact teaching hall where the proximity between performers and audience eliminates any barrier. The live music threads through the narrative rather than decorating it, and at seventy minutes the production respects a young attention span without rushing the story's moral architecture.
The arc moves from collective hope to individual corruption — the animals organize their new society, assign roles, compose songs, and then watch as the rules they wrote together get rewritten by the few. Orwell's point lands without lecture: the children see it happen. Angeliki Tombrou, Tassos Antoniou, and Yannis Pliakis shift between human and animal roles, and the puppet work makes the transitions legible for the youngest audience members while keeping the older ones inside the story.
If your children are under three, the seventy-minute runtime and some of the louder musical moments may test their limits. If you want a show that treats young audiences as capable of understanding unfairness, this production does not flinch from the parts of Orwell that most adaptations cut.
Megaro Moussikis metro is directly below the venue — one stop from Syntagma. The Music Library entrance is separate from the main Megaron halls, on the side facing Vasilissis Sofias. Tickets run thirteen euros for Zone A, eleven for Zone B, and nine for groups of fifteen or more. Arrive ten minutes early — seating is zoned, and families with younger children benefit from being closer to the stage. The run continues through March 29.
A seventy-five-year-old political fable, staged for an audience young enough to see the injustice before they learn to call it inevitable.