HOTEL MEDEA – Part I only (Zero Hour Market)




Hotel Medea is back! Developed, updated and on tour – if
you couldn’t get a ticket at the Arcola last year and can’t catch it in Brazil
this spring, don’t miss it this July in its site-specific reincarnation as part
of LIFT, starting from the North Greenwich Pier (formerly the QEII Pier) at the O2.


A provocative interpretation of the dark revenge myth of Medea, running from midnight till dawn with a live sound score by DJ Dolores.


Hotel Medea is an overnight production in three parts. Tickets on this
page are available for Part I only (11.00pm – 1.30am).


Part I: Zero Hour Market: The Meeting and Marriage of Jason
and Medea performed to a live DJ set. A maze of blood, food and dance turns
into a frenzied battle for the Golden Fleece.


To book tickets for the full trilogy click
here


What people have said about Hotel Medea:


“The theatrical version of bingeing on absinthe”

Time Out

“Hotel Medea is more, much more than a theatre show – a truly shared space”
Total Theatre

“Uncannily powerful”
The Guardian

“Forget the usual dose of heavy melodrama: this boundary-smashing adaptation of ancient classic Medea will have you clubbing till dawn, taking a nap then chatting with the performers over breakfast.”
The London Paper

“Seeing Hotel Medea will alter your perceptions about the medium of theatre and its potential for engaging and involving audiences. Unforgettable.”
Songlines Magazine

“This play consumes its audience in their most vulnerable, tired state, making for a terrifying but unforgettable experience.”
Spoonfed

“Medea’s performance is superhuman, painful to watch, granting catharsis as tangible as an arrow to the heart. It’s exhilarating but most definitely unsettling, as this is just the sort of entanglement with primitive forces that the trilogy warns us about.”
The Londonist

Click here for more information about LIFT

Click here for more infomation on the South Bank Centre’s Festival Brazil.

This video contains scenes of Hotel Medea and may be unsuitable for younger viewers