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Scenes from an Execution

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Playwright
  
Howard Barker

Scenes from an Execution t1gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcRFkbiyVUCetiwVmW

Characters
  
Urgentino, Pastaccio, Lasagna, Sordo, Supporta

Similar
  
Gertrude – The Cry, Vinegar Tom, Rock 'n' Roll, The Royal Family, Coram Boy

Scenes from an Execution is a play by the English playwright Howard Barker. The plot revolves around a female artist's struggles against the Venetian city-state in the aftermath of the 15th century Battle of Lepanto. Although the city commissions the painting to celebrate the victory over the Turks, the artist's vision differs dramatically from that of the Doge and the Catholic Church. The play has been described as "Barker's most famous and accessible play".

Originally a radio play for the BBC in 1984 with Glenda Jackson in the role of the artist Galactia, the stage version was first performed in 1990 at the Almeida Theatre in London with Glenda Jackson reprising her role. While a fringe production was staged in 2007 at the Hackney Empire, the play was later revived in 2012 by the National Theatre on its Lyttelton stage. Fiona Shaw and Tim McInnerny starred in this production. In his review of the National Theatre production, The Guardian critic Michael Billington wrote: "it shows Barker's poetic talent at its most disciplined and has the feel of a contemporary classic." Barker himself has turned against the play. "It's a very easy play to like", he said in 1999, and believed in 2012 that some of his other plays are superior works.

The play opened Off-Broadway at the Potomac Theatre Project in July 2008, directed by Richard Romagnoli and starring Jan Maxwell as Galactia. Maxwell was nominated for the Drama Desk Award, Outstanding Actress in a Play.

Scenes from an execution teaser


References

Scenes from an Execution Wikipedia