Mullett, Margaret. 2025. “Performance Issues in the Christos Paschon.” In “Emotion in Performance,” ed. Niki Tsironi, special issue, Classics@ 24. https://nrs.harvard.edu/URN-3:HLNC.ESSAY:104135609.
1. Older problems
2. Newer problems
3. Performability
3.1 Walter Puchner’s criticisms
3.2 Andrew Walker White’s analysis
3.3 Remaining issues
3.4 Mimesis and diegesis
Tarell Alvin McCraney’s 2006 play In the Red and Brown Water [29] tells the story of Oya, a runner, daughter, lover, woman of color, who loses her chance to run for Louisiana State in order to look after her dying mother, and, it is suggested, loses, through her running, the chance to have children. She gives up her lover Ogun, the businessman, and is betrayed by Shangu the soldier. As the author says: “the stage directions in a character’s speech are meant to be said as well as played.” Many are entrances and exits:
I would also mention the running scene I.3 with running commentary, Oya’s dream of her mother’s death I.6, the recognition of Elegba’s sexuality II.6, and Shango’s seduction in I.4 and I.7. In 1.4 he shows an interest:
Running
Yeah you was.
Till you started bleeding but still …
You know you can’t help that.
Nah, But still damn.
He puts his leg up.
He licks his lips.
But you black and phyne. So I couldn’t help it.
In 1.7 he succeeds:
Let me take you inside
The devastating climax comes in II.7 where Shango calls on Oya after she learns he has made another woman pregnant, and they converse while she is in the house; she emerges to give him a part of her in remembrance—the ear he “curls and caresses.”
Come down peace
Come down night
Cover over Oya girl
Make her world all right
I wished I could make a part of me
But I had to take what’s
Already there … Just give you what I got.
The sacrifice of Polyxena is narrated by Agamemnon, Hecuba, Odysseus, and Polyxena herself in the present tense.
Agamemnon voices Hecuba’s stoic reaction and request for Polyxena’s body, and his own frustration at the failure of the sacrifice to produce a wind.