Guardian Weekly

A house on fire

Punchdrunk, the company that has for 20 years enthralled theatregoers by exploding traditional dramatic form and setting performers and audiences loose into the same vast, detailed, labyrinthine spaces, is taking on what might be the biggest, most fundamental story of them all – and one, alas, with terrible resonance in this particular moment. It is the siege of Troy: the subject of Homer’s Iliad, the focus of many Greek tragedies and, in many ways, the literary war that has, over millennia, served as a proxy for thinking about other, more recent conflicts.

The Burnt City will be the company’s first show on a large scale in the UK since 2013, when it turned an old sorting office near Paddington station in London into a flyblown old Hollywood for The Drowned Man, a version of

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Guardian Weekly

Guardian Weekly1 min read
Eyewitness United Arab Emirates
Dubai has been wrestling with the aftermath of extraordinary torrential rain that flooded the desert city, as people told harrowing stories of sleeping in their cars and passengers endured chaotic scenes at the airport. Up to 259.5mm of rain fell on
Guardian Weekly3 min read
The Man Who Helped Scores To Flee Violence In Darfur
Every night, for weeks at a time last year, Saad al-Mukhtar put a small group of people in the back of his Toyota Land Cruiser and drove them under the cover of darkness from his home in the Sudanese city of Geneina across the border and into Chad. T
Guardian Weekly3 min readAmerican Government
Melania Is Back – But She’s Still Not Playing By The Rules
Her biggest fashion statement as first lady was a green jacket emblazoned with the words, “I really don’t care, do u?” More recently Melania Trump has given the impression that she doesn’t care whether her husband, Donald, returns to the White House.

Related Books & Audiobooks