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Euripides and Andromache
While Paris inspected them, each attempted with her powers to bribe him ; Hera offered to make him king of Europe and Asia, Athena offered wisdom and skill in war, and Aphrodite, who had the Charites and the Horai to enhance her charms with flowers and song ( according to a fragment of the Cypria quoted by Athenagoras ), offered the world's most beautiful woman ( Euripides, Andromache, l. 284, Helena l. 676 ).
He appears as a character in Euripides ' tragedy Andromache ( c. 425 BC ).
* Euripides, Andromache.
Menelaus appears as a character in a number of 5th-century Greek tragedies: Sophocles ' Ajax, and Euripides ' Andromache, Helen, Orestes, Iphigenia at Aulis, and The Trojan Women.
* Euripides ' play Andromache is performed.
According to Euripides ' play Andromache, Orestes slew Neoptolemus just outside a temple and took off with his cousin, Hermione.
* Andromache, a tragedy by Euripides.
Mentioned briefly in Euripides ' plays Trojan Women and Hecuba, simply stating that Andromache, wife of Hector, was his promised spear bride.
In Euripides ' The Trojan Women, Andromache despairs at the murder of her son Astyanax and is then given to Neoptolemus as a concubine.
In his Andromache, Euripides dramatizes when she and her child were nearly assassinated by Hermione, the wife of Neoptolemus and daughter of Helen and Menelaus.
Aomawa Baker ( Andromache ) in Euripides ' The Trojan Women, directed by Brad Mays at the ARK Theatre Company in Los Angeles, 2003
Tragic poets sometimes produced their plays in other cities ( Euripides ' play Andromache for example was possibly performed in Argos just before The Clouds appeared at the City Dionysia ) yet comic poets in Aristophanes ' time wrote specifically for local audiences and their plays were studded with topical jokes that only a local audience could understand.
24, 29 ; Euripides, Andromache 1012 ; Virgil Georgics iv.
The female protagonists of the plays, such as Andromache, Phaedra and Medea, the new figures are tragic Euripides, which he skillfully portrays the tormented sensitivity and irrational impulses that collide with the world of reason.
" — Euripides, Andromache, describing the dual promise, while others, such as Ovid, do not mention it at all.
In the chronology of events following Orestes, this play takes place after the events contained in plays such as Electra by Euripides or The Libation Bearers by Aeschylus, and before events contained in plays like The Eumenides by Aeschylus and Andromache by Euripides.

Euripides and Children
Dionysus in 69 ( 1968 ), based on Euripides ' The Bacchae, text by Schechner based on group improvisations ; Makbeth ( 1969 ), ( based on Shakespeare ), text devised by Schechner ; Commune ( 1970 ), a group devised work with the text arranged by Schechner and the company, which won Joan MacIntosh an OBIE for Distinguished Performance in 1970 ; The Tooth of Crime ( 1972 ) by Sam Shepard ; Mother Courage and Her Children ( 1975 ) by Bertolt Brecht ; The Marilyn Project ( 1975 ), by David Gaard ); Oedipus ( 1977 ) by Seneca ; Cops ( 1978 ) by Terry Curtis Fox ; The Survivor and the Translator ( 1978 ) performed and directed by Leeny Sack ; The Balcony ( 1979 ) by Jean Genet.

Euripides and Heracles
In Greek mythology, Eurystheus ( pronounced, meaning " broad strength " in folk etymology and pronounced ) was king of Tiryns, one of three Mycenaean strongholds in the Argolid, although other authors including Homer and Euripides cast him as ruler of Argos: Sthenelus was his father and the " victorious horsewoman " Nicippe his mother, and he was a grandson of the hero Perseus, as was his opponent Heracles.
Apollodoros ( Bibliotheke ) recounts that Megara was unharmed and given in marriage to Iolaus, while in Euripides ' version Heracles killed Megara, too.
In the play Heracles by Euripides, Amphitryon survives to witness the murders of Heracles ' children and wife.
* Euripides, Euripides II: The Cyclops and Heracles, Iphigenia in Tauris, Helen ( The Complete Greek Tragedies ) ( Vol 4 ), University Of Chicago Press ; 1 edition ( April 15, 2002 ).
According to Euripides, Heracles shot Cycnus with his arrows, and this took place in Amphanae near the river Anaurus.
In the Heracleidae of Euripides, Macaria (" she who is blessed ") is a daughter of Heracles.
In Euripides ' play Heracles, Iris appears alongside Lyssa, cursing Heracles with the fit of madness in which he kills his three sons and his wife Megara.
* Herakles ( Euripides ), also known as Heracles Mad, a Greek tragedy by Euripides

Euripides and Hippolytus
In the seventeenth century, Racine expressed admiration for Sophocles but was more influenced by Euripides ( e. g. Iphigenia at Aulis and Hippolytus were the models for his plays Iphigénie and Phèdre ).
Alternatively, in Euripides ' version, Hippolytus, Phaedra's nurse told Hippolytus of her mistress's love and he swore he would not reveal the nurse as his source of information.
Nine of Seneca's tragedies survive, all of which are fabula crepidata ( tragedies adapted from Greek originals ); his Phaedra, for example, was based on Euripides ' Hippolytus.
* Euripides ' play Hippolytus is performed in the Dionysia competition, the famous Athenian dramatic festival.
** Hippolytus ( play ), a tragedy by Euripides
* Euripides, Hippolytus, a Greek play
* Charles L. Mee, True Love ( 2001 ), modernized adaptation of Euripides ' Hippolytus and Racine's Phèdre.
* Euripides: Hippolytus ( the suspicion of F )
worked on the plays by Euripides, publishing in 1916 a translation of choruses from Iphigeneia at Aulis, in 1919 a translation of choruses from Iphigeneia at Aulis and Hippolytus, an adaptation of Hippolytus called Hippolytus Temporizes ( 1927 ), a translation of choruses from The Bacchae and Hecuba ( 1931 ), and Euripides ' Ion ( 1937 ) a loose translation of Ion.
* Hippolytus ( 1908, Euripides, in Gilbert Murray's translation, London Gaiety Theatre, 1908 )
This volume contains a reverie on the boyhood of Hippolytus, ' Hippolytus Veiled ' ( first published in Macmillan's Magazine in 1889 ), which has been called " the finest prose ever inspired by Euripides ".
In the play, Hippolytus, by the famous Greek playwright, Euripides.
* Euripides: Hippolytus, The Bacchae
A possible explanation might be found in a scholium to line 264 of the play, which asserts that traditionally Medea's children were killed by the Corinthians after her escape ; Euripides ' apparent invention of Medea's filicide might have offended its audience just as his first treatment of the Hippolytus myth did.
** Hippolytus and The Bacchae, by Euripides
Hippolytus (, Hippolytos ) is an Ancient Greek tragedy by Euripides, based on the myth of Hippolytus, son of Theseus.

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