Medea

BY EURIPIDES

TRANSLATED BY DIANE J. RAYOR 

Jason leaves Medea, after she has sacrificed everything for him. This ancient Greek play tells the tragic story of a broken oath and a woman's revenge.

Reproduced with permission of Cambridge University Press through PLSclear.


God of Carnage

by Yasmina Reza

Translated by Christopher Hampton

What happens when two couples meet up after one of their young sons knocks out two of the other boy’s front teeth? Will the parents be more civilised than their boys? Or will the evening spiral into chaos as all manner of issues surface, relationships fray and new alliances form? 

Yasmina Reza’s sharp-tongued and witty satire delights in the depths of human nature and provides insightful home truths on what it means to be a parent, a partner and a human.


The performance takes place by special agreement with Concord Theatricals GmbH on behalf of Samuel French Ltd


The Cherry Orchard

BY anton chekov

Anton Chekhov’s The Cherry Orchard follows a Russian family returning to their ancestral estate, which includes a beautiful cherry orchard, as they confront financial troubles. Throughout the play, characters grapple with changing social dynamics, nostalgia, and the looming threat of losing what they hold dear. The story delicately examines themes of memory, transformation, and the tension between tradition and progress.