Vol. XXIII No. 5
February 2008

Murder, Music, and Mertes

The Greeks, Part Two

If the wind had been blowing, no one would have gotten hurt. The Trojan War ended as it began: with a human sacrifice to make the wind blow and allow the army to travel. For the ancient Greeks—who stood on the threshold between what we define as the primitive world and modern democratic society—sacrificing people to the gods brought uncertain and unsettling repercussions. The nascent concept of justice (as we know it today) pervaded Greek culture of the fourth century B.C., and was a catalyst for much of its drama. The ancient writers discovered that if you put people who have opposing concepts of justice into the same room, have them act relentlessly to see their version of justice done, and throw in the strong opinions of numerous gods, you get some good stories.

Brian Mertes returns to Juilliard this month to direct the second installment of The Greeks trilogy, The Murders. Last season, he directed part one, The War; seen here is Stephen Bel Davies in a scene from that production. (Photo by Jessica Katz)

The Drama Division’s fourth-year actors (Group 37) embrace some of those stories this month with The Greeks, Part Two: The Murders, an epic synthesis of three plays by Aeschylus, Euripides, and Sophocles that have been compiled and adapted by John Barton and Kenneth Cavander. It is the second installment in a three-part series following the Trojan War and the lineage of the House of Atreus. Last year’s class of fourth-year actors performed Part One: The War, and the current class of third-year actors looks forward to completing the cycle next year with Part Three: The Gods.

This is the last full-scale production the members of Group 37 will present during their Juilliard career, and they are ready to go out with a bang. Says Dion Mucciacito, who plays Odysseus: “It’s an ensemble piece to the bone. Every person of our class adds a key element to the life on the stage.”

With a cast of 18 actors, a grand sweep of mythic history, and a body count that rivals many of this year’s bloodiest Oscar nominees, The Greeks is indeed a monumental way to end the season. Though the plays may seem extreme, they are increasingly relevant—focusing on a society recovering from a decade-long war, and the festering internal damages that become most apparent in a post-war setting. “These are questions about war, questions about choice,” observes Richard Feldman, assistant director of the Drama Division. “As we face our big questions, and the disasters and catastrophes, the questions the Greeks are asking are, in some way, more relevant than the ordered, hierarchical world of Shakespeare.”

Though the plays have a lot to teach us, the approach is far from didactic. Brian Mertes, the director of the entire Greeks cycle, is less concerned with recreating the ancient Greeks’ vision of the plays as he is with discovering, in collaboration with the actors, a fresh, significant understanding of them. “With Greek theater, all of these people—they’re all inside all of us. I have a killer inside me. I have a victorious king. I have a lost prince,” he says.

Not withstanding their universality, the role that the dramas Hecuba, Agamemnon, and Electra play in history is still vitally important. Explains Mertes: “They’re kind of like dramaturgical building blocks ... it’s the foundation of our western dramaturgy. The storytelling is raw, direct, rough-hewn. It’s a straight shot.”

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Event Information
The Greeks, Part Two: The Murders

Stephanie P. McClelland Drama Theater
Thursday, Feb. 14-Monday, Feb. 18

Event Calendar