National Theatre: The Playboy of the Western World
Αγοράστε εισιτήρια →Πρακτικές Πληροφορίες
| Ημερομηνία | Πέμπτη 28 Μαΐου |
|---|---|
| Ώρα | 20:30 |
| Τιμή | €25 |
| Εισιτήρια | Αγοράστε εισιτήρια |
| Χώρος | Μέγαρο Μουσικής Αθηνών (Kolonaki) |
| Διεύθυνση | Βασιλίσσης Σοφίας & Κόκκαλη |
Περιγραφή στα Αγγλικά
A young man stumbles into a pub in County Mayo and announces he has killed his father. Instead of calling the police, the locals turn him into a celebrity. Nicola Coughlan watches him from behind the bar, playing Pegeen Mike with the particular wariness of someone who already knows she is going to fall for exactly the wrong person.
John Millington Synge wrote The Playboy of the Western World in 1907 and the Abbey Theatre audience rioted on opening night — the language was too raw, the portrait of rural Ireland too unflattering. Caitriona McLaughlin, Artistic Director of the Abbey Theatre, directs this National Theatre production filmed live in London's Lyttelton Theatre. Eanna Hardwicke plays Christy Mahon, the supposed parricide. Siobhan McSweeney brings the sharp comedic instinct she honed in Derry Girls to the role of Widow Quin.
| Aspect | Details | |--------|---------| | Setting | Megaron's Alexandra Trianti Hall — 1,750 seats, full cinema-grade projection, the Irish countryside filling the screen at a scale that makes the mud feel close | | Vibe | Laughter that keeps catching on something uncomfortable — Synge wrote comedy with teeth and this production lets them bite | | Sound | The Hiberno-English dialect is the engine of the play — McLaughlin keeps the rhythm of Synge's prose intact, letting sentences roll and crack like conversation overheard through a pub wall | | Door | Tickets through megaron.gr, presented in English with Greek subtitles, in collaboration with the British Council and the British Embassy in Athens |
The production leans into the absurdity rather than the romance. A community that glorifies violence and then recoils when it turns out to be real — Synge saw something about how stories work that has not changed in a hundred and nineteen years. Coughlan's Pegeen is vain, sharp, easily bored, and entirely convincing as someone who would choose danger over the steady man her father picked for her. Hardwicke builds Christy from terrified runaway to swaggering local hero with a physical transformation that the close-up camerawork catches in detail.
The final act turns. When reality punctures the myth, the village does what villages do — it protects itself. McLaughlin stages the reversal without sentimentality, and the last image of Pegeen alone carries the weight of a woman who chose the story over the man and lost both.
If you want gentle comedy with a tidy resolution, Synge did not write one. The laughs get progressively harder to separate from the cruelty. But if you want to watch a cast dismantle the mechanics of myth-making in real time, with language that sounds like it was written last week, this is what the National Theatre does at its best.
Megaron Mousikis Athinon, Vasilissis Sofias Avenue — two-minute walk from Megaro Moussikis metro station. Screening on 28 May at 20:30. Tickets through megaron.gr.
The Abbey rioted in 1907 because Synge told the truth about storytelling — this production lets you decide whether the audience has caught up.