A collection of ritual texts, parables, and performances from one of the most singular voices in contemporary theatre.
A conference where linguists reveal the "true" origins of Greek words.
A midnight rite on the Elefsina waterfront where two siblings graft their parents' bodies onto their own.
A laboratory of mourning that turns letters to the dead into perfume.
A cool, lethal tale about a man forewarned--by machine and committee--that he will be stabbed.
In
Etymologies and Other Rites, language, family, and fate are laid bare on the slab. Efthimis Filippou--acclaimed screenwriter of
Dogtooth,
The Lobster, and
The Killing of a Sacred Deer--moves between lecture, cabaret, and liturgy with a poker face that leaves space for awe. His stage world is one of rituals disguised as bureaucracies, where saints and civil servants coexist, where grief becomes procedure and humour a form of prayer. Songs flare, knives appear, miracles are audited like minutes from a meeting.
The result is hilarious, brutal, and unexpectedly tender--a theatre of reason and revelation, where etymology proves to be another form of storytelling, and where the stories we tell about words, parents, and gods are the stories that make us. Taken together, these four works form a darkly luminous cycle about belief and substitution--of tongues, bodies, and meanings--played out between the sacred and the absurd.
Includes:
Etymologies (a play),
Big and Small Ships (a ritual performance),
Eau de Cologne (a choral device), and
George (a narrative).