Ten works necessary to understand the history of theater

The theater’s vitality allows reinterpreting tragic or comical storylines from every period, in a puzzling world full of fantasy that culminates in catharsis and establishes a tight bond with the audience, century after century.

6

Oresteia

AESCHYLUS, 458 aC.

The only complete theatrical trilogy comes from Aeschylus, in the 5th century and, in the 21st century, it becomes the Oresteia. In it, families are described with some deification and mythology. It goes beyond time. Two brothers become enemies, a woman, Clytaemnestra, who awaits her husband’s return, Agamemnon. However, Agamemnon has an affair with Aegisthus. Agamemnon kills his own daughter. Clytaemnestra kills then her husband to preserve the adultery. Orestes, the son, decides to avenge his father’s death through Electra, his sister. A story filled with revenge that Aeschylus claims it to be an act of justice.