Photo from Medea Rehearsal

鈥淢edea鈥 Gets a Makeover

How an ambitious, intergenerational collaboration re-envisioned a classic Greek tragedy for our times.

In mid-April, audiences at Goodhart Theater were treated to a staging of Media/Medea, an adaptation of Euripides鈥 Greek tragedy Medea, re-envisioned for the 21st century from a Black perspective. A week later, a second set of performances took place, this time in the Black Box Theater at Community College of Philadelphia (CCP).

For the student actors and tech crew, this was not only a chance to participate in the premiere of a play by Pulitzer-Prize winning playwright James Ijames鈥攐蹿 Fat Ham fame鈥攂ut also an opportunity to interact with peers from a different educational setting. Half of the students in the production were from Bryn Mawr and Haverford and half from CCP.

The staging of the play marked the finale of Greek Drama/Black Lives, a larger yearlong collaboration between the institutions.

As Classics Professor Catherine Conybeare, who was principal investigator for the American Council of Learned Societies grant that funded the project, explains, a key goal of Greek Drama/Black Lives was to 鈥渟trengthen the connections between CCP and Bryn Mawr and also to shine a light on what we can learn today from the classics.鈥

The play was produced by the Theater Program at Bryn Mawr, led by co-PI and Chair of the Arts Catharine Slusar, who brought Ijames to the project. 鈥淭heater, with its ability to share perspectives, is at the core of what it is to be human,鈥 Slusar says. 鈥淭his project uses theater to draw a line from the classics to the present, challenging us along the way.鈥

Stanton
Bryn Mawr students Bina Lee 鈥25, Kay Strine 鈥24, and Bethany Wisdom 鈥24 with E.M. Stanton School students Nahmir Wilson and Mubaarak Wall.

In addition to the play, the Greek Drama/Black Lives project included a playwriting class, a partnership with middle schoolers at E.M. Stanton School in South Philadelphia, and a theoretical and experiential graduate seminar.

鈥淛ames Ijames is at this point a playwright of extraordinary distinction and he is also one of the most generous and collaborative people with whom I have ever worked.鈥 says Conybeare.

Media/Medea follows the character of Medea (Monet Debose) as she grapples with her husband Jason鈥檚 (Akeem Davis) betrayal and explores how the couple鈥檚 teenage children respond to this upheaval in their lives.

In transposing Medea to a modern setting, Ijames, an associate professor of theatre at Villanova University, looked to popular culture for inspiration. The chorus, a mainstay of Greek tragedy, still plays a leading role, but this time they are part of the social media rumor mill. For the character of Medea, Ijames was inspired by Norma Desmond, the protagonist of Sunset Boulevard, and Porsha Williams from Real Housewives of Atlanta.

鈥淚t鈥檚 great to see somebody who鈥檚 coming from the same space as me, especially from the Black perspective.鈥 鈥 Michael Mclaughlin, Community College of Philadelphia student

Media/Medea is not simply an adaptation; it is a transformation,鈥 says Slusar. 鈥淚james has taken the text and reset it in our time, putting the children in the center of the tragedy. He asks, when a famous couple divorces epically, with every minute captured on social media, what happens to the children?鈥

The adaptation resonated deeply with the student actors. 鈥淲hether in ancient Greece or modern-day America, certain themes endure,鈥 says Quinn Eli, curriculum coordinator for theater at CCP.

Photo of Raelle Myrick-Hodges in rehearsal
Director Raelle Myrick-Hodges in rehearsal at CCP.

鈥淲hen you鈥檙e talking about the impact of revenge and betrayal and dislocation on a family,鈥 says Eli, 鈥渨ho among us can鈥檛 easily imagine the impact that would have on our own family? And then you add the element of social media and that kind of cultural scrutiny, and you鈥檝e got something that continues to resonate.鈥

Michael McLaughlin, a CCP theater major, agrees: 鈥淚 responded immediately with such excitement because he has this really interesting way of writing very simple language that says so much. It鈥檚 great to see somebody who鈥檚 coming from the same space as me, especially from the Black perspective, and can really figure out how to say a lot without a lot of words.鈥

鈥淭o watch these students from each institution be challenged by each other, be celebrated by each other, is really, really exciting.鈥 鈥 Director Raelle Myrick-Hodges

For Regan Riehl 鈥24, an English major minoring in theater, engaging with Media/Medea with the rest of the cast proved to be a fascinating process of investigation. 鈥淭he more you read it, the more there is to pull out of it and to look at,鈥 says Riehl, who played Glauke, the princess for whom Jason abandons Medea.

鈥淓very time a group of humans gets to work on a brand-new something, it鈥檚 magic,鈥 says Raelle Myrick-Hodges, founder of Philadelphia鈥檚 Azuka Theatre Company, who directed Media/Medea, adding that what made this especially magical was the collaboration between Bryn Mawr and CCP.

鈥淭o watch these students from each institution be challenged by each other, be celebrated by each other, is really, really exciting,鈥 she says. 鈥淎nd what they鈥檙e bringing to the table is a new understanding of an author鈥檚 work, because you have 15 people who all think differently.鈥

Medea Play

Lead artist Akeem Davis, a Barrymore- and Haas Award-winning actor who has taught at both CCP and BMC and plays the part of Jason, was equally invigorated by the collaboration.

鈥淚 think the students recognized that they have had very different college experiences to this point,鈥 says Davis, 鈥渁nd so the process was a lot about them learning that their lives may be very different and also not that different and being able to appreciate both realizations.鈥

Eli notes that at CCP, the Media/Medea project has spurred collaboration not just with Bryn Mawr,

Catherin Slusar
Associate Director of Theater Catharine Slusar discussing the work of modern theater theorists in the graduate seminar.

but also among different disciplines at the college. 鈥淚n this way, our theater students are engaged in a complete academic experience, one that equips them to pursue a career in the arts by emphasizing the value of critical analysis, interpersonal communication, and professional development.鈥

The project has revived and strengthened the connections between Bryn Mawr and CCP at a time when both, following the restrictions imposed by COVID, were at 鈥渆xceptionally challenging moments,鈥 says Conybeare.

鈥淭o collaborate together so fully on a project that is centered on a Black family and that is so richly creative in its use of an ancient Greek story is exhilarating,鈥 she says, 鈥渁nd it has proven profoundly beneficial to both institutions.鈥

 

Published on: 06/14/2023