On Thursday 4th of September, here at the Assembly Rooms we have a live screening of National Theatre Live's Medea. To give you an idea of what to expect, here's an interview that
Over a lengthy career, Helen McCrory has played villains (Narcissa
Malfoy in the Harry Potter films), romantics (Rosalind in ‘As You Like
It’) and goons (Cherie Blair in ‘The Queen’). Now she stars as the
ultimate anti-heroine, Euripides’s Medea, in a new NT production. She
explains why it is the role for women.
Is Medea a bit like a female Hamlet?
‘It is, it’s one of the greatest parts you’ll ever play as an actress.
Except it’s the reverse of Hamlet because he spends three hours worrying
and does nothing, whereas Medea takes an hour and 15, massacres the
whole stage and walks off. But it’s great because she uses every
shred of femininity that she has to do it, and she also has the
complexity of guilt.’
Medea does some pretty nasty stuff: filicide, regicide. Is she a villain?
‘Ben Power’s adaptation focuses on disenfranchisement, on what happens
when this highly educated, powerful, manipulative, eloquent woman, is
not allowed to be part of society. But it also looks at acts of extreme
violence, which often come from long-term brutalisation – which is
Medea. She’s a product of a warring society, which is very relevant to
today.’
The play is almost 2,500 years old. Why has it endured?
‘It’s the same reason that people love crime dramas: you want to know
how she’s going to do it and you’re wondering if this is some chemical
imbalance. But it’s not. She basically says: I choose to take
back my life. And, even in the twenty-first century, we’re not used to
women speaking like that. Although, judging by the two Greek families I
know, it’s clear women have always run that society.’
You and your husband Damien Lewis are pretty famous now. Has it been hard keeping your feet on the ground?
‘I have a six-year-old and a seven-year-old. There can be no illusions
when one of them is shouting “I’ve run out of toilet paper mummy! Shall I
use my hand?” It’s lovely to dress up and go out with your husband. But
all of that is really just a by-product of the work we do.’
Is your plan to continue doing theatre? Or is more film and TV on the horizon?
‘I’m just constantly distracted by the next pretty thing in the
headlights. I still see myself as building my career up. But I’d really
like to do comedy next. I’d really like to do a comic film. Or a comic
play, or comic TV, just comedy. I may just set myself up at the end of
the street and tell a few gags.’
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Tickets are £15 or £14 concessions, and are available to to book online, by popping into our Box Office or giving us a call on 01584 878141
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