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Welcome, 77 artists, 40 different points of Attica welcomes you by singing Erotokritos an epic romance written at 1713 by Vitsentzos Kornaros

Sunday, June 5, 2016

Sunset at the Villa Thalia review – overstuffed and underheated

DORFMAN, LONDON Alexi Kaye Campbell’s new work has plenty of political comment but little to say on the state of present-day Greece The theatre, one character proclaims in Alexi Kaye Campbell’s new play, is “democracy’s twin”. Its aim is to show you a different perspective. It should stir up emotions and change your point of view. This is a proclamation that becomes a cudgel. _Sunset at the Villa Thalia_ is not likely to change anyone’s point of view. Not least because it is so stuffed with declarations – about politics and about personalities which demand to be taken at face value. Campbell, the child of a Greek father and English mother, was an infant when the colonels took over in Greece. He sets his play on Skiathos both in the year of the coup and some nine years later. An English couple, cajoled and bludgeoned by an over-bearing American, buy a cottage at a knockdown price, and effectively disinherit the Greek owners. The political metaphor is not hard to decipher, and it is rammed home further by references to the toppling of the Allende regime in Chile. Yet the vital opportunity to make this resonate with present-day Greece is missed. Which is the more surprising as seven years ago in his fine play, _The Pride,_ Campbell subtly used an earlier era to light up the present. Continue reading...


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