Elektra; Orestes and Iphigeneia in Tauris
The three plays by Euripides in this volume - "Elektra", "Orestes" and "Iphigeneia in Tauris", show the consequences of Agamemnon's "sacrifice" of his daughter at the start of the Trojan War.
Euripides was born near Athens between 485 and 480 BC. His first
play was presented in 455 BC and he wrote some hundred altogether
of which nineteen survive – a greater number than those of
Aeschylus and Sophocles combined – and which include Alkestis,
Medea, Bacchae, Hippolytos, Ion and Iphigenia at Aulis. He died in
406 BC. Kenneth McLeish studied Classics and Music at Worcester
College, Oxford. Once a full-time translator, author and dramatist,
he published extensively including The Good Reading Guide,
Shakespeare's People, The Theatre of Aristophanes, Companion to the
Arts in the Twentieth Century, Myth, The Listener's Guide to
Classical Music and Crucial Classics (both with Valerie McLeish)
and The Bloomsbury Guide to Human Thought (as general editor).
His original plays and his translations - from ancient Greek drama,
as well as from Strindberg, Ibsen Moliere and Strindberg - have
been widely performed, most notably by the National Theatre and the
Royal Shakespeare Company.
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