CANCELLED

M. Atwood: PENELOPIAD

20. September 2022
8.00 pm
Hell's Courtyard
19 €
CANCELLED

Important information

General Terms and Conditions

Note: This information pertains to a past event. For the most up-to-date information, please check our calendar.

We would also like to inform all visitors that the performances of play The Penelopiad, which were scheduled for this week on 19, 20 and 22 September, at the Hell’s Courtyard, have been cancelled due to the predicted low temperatures in the evening.
All ticket buyers for 19, 20 and 21 September are entitled to a refund.
Customers who bought tickets at the Križank box office are asked to come in person and bring the original tickets and receipt with them. Customers who purchased tickets online or at other Eventim points of sale, please send the order number or a photo of the purchased tickets (the bar code should be visible) and information for the refund (name and surname, address, telephone number and transaction account number).
Alternative performance dates will be known later and will be published on the website.
Thank you for your understanding.

Director: Livija Pandur
Translator and author of the adaptation: Tibor Hrs Pandur
Dramaturg: Tibor Hrs Pandur
Music: Silence (Boris Benko & Primož Hladnik)
Set designer: Sven Jonke
Costume designer: Leo Kulaš
Music director: Živa Ploj Peršuh
Movement coach: Sanja Nešković Peršin
Lighting designer: Vesna Kolarec
Language consultant: Tatjana Stanič
Assistant dramaturg (student): Brina Jeneček
Assistant costume designer: Matic Veler

Cast:
Penelope: Polona Juh
Eurycleia: Sabina Kogovšek
Tanis; Helen: Saša Pavlin Stošič
Melanto: Gaja Filač, a. g.
Clytie: Ivana Percan Kodarin, a. g.

Maids:
Selene: Zala Hodnik, a. g.
Zoe: Urška Kastelic, a. g.
Alecto: Ana Plahutnik, a. g.
Chloris: Maria Shilkina, a. g.

In adapting her novel into dramatic form, Margaret Atwood (1939) noted that The Penelopiad (2007) is much more than a straightforward adaptation of The Odyssey. The narrative foregrounds the story of Penelope and her twelve maids, who were hanged on Odysseus’s order on his return from his voyage (for their alleged betrayal and relationships with suitors). Homer’s Penelope, who has been held up for centuries as a model and instructive example of the subjugation of women, is given an ingenious twist by Atwood. Penelope’s posthumous confession is countered by the hanged maids, posing two key questions: why did Odysseus have them murdered so cruelly, and what role did Penelope play in this? And more importantly, they constantly refute Penelope’s testimony, which in turn reveals the hitherto hidden mechanisms of the “official version” of The Odyssey. In a society where we still witness extremely high levels of violence against women, in terms of rape, femicide and exploitation, every brave testimony is judged. Is Penelope lying or is she telling the truth? Her confession is the only way to liberation, the only way to free herself from the prison of her story, one that was imposed upon her, the archetype of a patient and dutiful wife, “an edifying legend”, a stick used to beat other women. And like many before her, she has nothing to lose but her chains.

Livija Pandur

Important information

General Terms and Conditions