Breathing Life into Myth
As the day of the show moves closer, the artists work hard to bring Eurydice to life. Throughout the show鈥檚 process, the one thing that the team focused on was creating an integrated work of art. Everything in this show has a purpose. The director of Eurydice, Robert Homer-Drummond, stated, 鈥淲e want the audience to come and be immersed in art for an evening鈥hat has been an intentional purpose from the beginning, including the lobby and the dance in the preshow.鈥
The entire cast hopes to enrapture the audience for an evening through a tale of grief and love and purpose. 鈥淓specially during this time of COVID, there have been many limits on art which is hard,鈥 said actress Astro Alford. 鈥淚鈥檇 like the audience to go away with a feeling of hope that you can look at your griefs and pains and know you aren鈥檛 alone in that. Even if it doesn鈥檛 work out the way you want and you are burdened with great grief, you can walk away with hope. To know that they are not alone.鈥
The Myth and the Play
In the original Greek myth, the audience follows the musician Orpheus in his journey to the underworld to save his love, Eurydice. Hades offers him a chance to bring her to the overworld. Orpheus must walk out of the underworld with Eurydice behind him, never looking at her or she will disappear. For various reasons, depending on the version, Orpheus turns around. Eurydice is lost to death forever.
The playwright of Eurydice, Sarah Ruhl, takes a different perspective, writing the myth from Eurydice鈥檚 point of view. During the time she wrote the play, Ruhl was facing the death of her father. As a result, Ruhl also adds a new character, Eurydice鈥檚 father. Ruhl showcases multiple forms of love through playing with parallels and creating a story beyond romance.
Actress Astro Alford, who plays one of the stones, had a lot to say about Eurydice, the show鈥檚 heroine.
鈥淪he is young and vulnerable and afraid, but I think she is so very human鈥he can鈥檛 fully understand [Orpheus鈥檚] love of music but she meets it with understanding. In the original myth, she doesn鈥檛 get to shine as much. I love that this gives more life to her. She has a story. The myth is not complete without Eurydice.鈥
Eurydice faces difficult choices throughout the show and each of those choices leads her down a path that goes beyond the myth that originated this tale.
鈥淭he thing that stuck with me is the division and mirroring of death and life,鈥 said Josh Center, the understudy for Orpheus. 鈥淲hat is the afterlife like? Sarah Ruhl did such a wonderful job. It鈥檚 wacky and sad and amazing all at once. She captures it, but also lets your imagination wander.鈥 This show uses language and the scenery and the costumes to link together parallels between life and death. What does it mean to love? What does it mean to die?
One Word
Love is the core of this play. Orpheus expresses his love and devotion through facing trials to reach Eurydice in the underworld. Eurydice expresses her love through patience, despite not understanding her lover鈥檚 devotion to music. Her father expresses his love for Eurydice through the sacrifices he makes to ensure her happiness. So, naturally, when asked about the play鈥檚 meaning, Alexis Morehead, the actress playing Eurydice, responded with 鈥渓ove鈥…but there is more to it than that.
鈥淎t first, I immediately thought of 鈥榣ove.鈥 As I鈥檝e built upon the character, however, and really kind of come to an understanding of why Sarah Ruhl wrote what she wrote and like why she did it in particular orders. I think the word changed in context鈥s in because of where you come from. It explains who you are sometimes. For me, it鈥檚 about context. The thing in your life that gives you direction. I think that鈥檚 what Eurydice鈥檚 father tries to give her.鈥
With the addition of Eurydice鈥檚 father, this show builds upon love and focuses on the human experience鈥攍ove in many forms and choices made out of love.
Fate is More Than It Seems
Throughout the process, the cast and crew of Eurydice have shown nothing but passion and love for this tale. Leaning away from the Greek myth, this tale captures more than love. It delves into grief, choice, and the humanity of it all. Death and life are parallels. Choices and lines are parallels. Fate is more than it seems.
Join the South Carolina School of the Arts and the Department of Theatre & Dance in their sold-out rendition of Eurydice by Sarah Ruhl. A myth in modern times. A tragedy in a daughter鈥檚 arms.
Article by By Sharice Somero