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Interview with Kazuo Ishiguro, Antigone Review

Anne McElvoy is joined by Kazuo Ishiguro, who talks about his new novel. Greek scholar Oliver Taplin and playwright Roy Williams discuss the enduring appeal of Antigone.

Anne McElvoy talks to the Booker prize winner, Kazuo Ishiguro about his new novel, The Buried Giant - a kind of Arthurian quest for the 21st century which explores the boundaries between memory and forgetting. And with two new productions of Sophocles' play Antigone on stage in London, she is joined in studio by the Greek scholar and translator Oliver Taplin and the playwright Roy Williams to assess the reasons for the tragedy's enduring appeal.

Antigone, starring Juliette Binoche, is at the Barbican Theatre from March 4th - 28th.
Roy Williams' version of Antigone, performed by Pilot Theatre and co-commissioned by Derby Theatre, runs at London's Stratford East Theatre from 24th February to March 14th.
If you still have an appetite for tragedy after that, tune in to Radio 3's Sunday Drama on March 8th. Kristin Scott Thomas will be starring as Electra in a version by Frank McGuiness which was first staged at the Old Vic Theatre.
Oliver Taplin's Sophocles: Four Tragedies is published later this March by Oxford University Press.

Producer: Zahid Warley
Photo: Ivo van Hove, Antigone, Juliette Binoche, photocredit Jan Versweyveld.

Available now

45 minutes

Last on

Thu 5 Mar 2015 22:00

Chapters

  • Kazuo Ishiguro

    Booker prize winner, Kazuo Ishiguro talks about his new novel, The Buried Giant

    Duration: 22:41

  • Antigone

    Oliver Taplin and Roy Williams assess the reasons for the tragedy's enduring appeal

    Duration: 20:47

Credits

Role Contributor
Presenter Anne McElvoy
Interviewed Guest Kazuo Ishiguro
Interviewed Guest Oliver Taplin
Interviewed Guest Roy Williams
Producer Zahid Warley

Broadcast

  • Thu 5 Mar 2015 22:00

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