AEF26: Ion
For theatre lovers, summer weekends in Greece are tied to travelling from Athens to the Ancient Theatre of Epidaurus for their annual pilgrimage into the heart of Greece’s theatrical heritage. Set amidst the serene landscapes of the Argolid, Epidaurus offers you the chance to sit in an extraordinary and deeply moving space and watch performances that, although rooted to the ancient monument, speak directly to the present moment.
Last year, the Athens-Epidaurus Festival celebrated its 70th edition, a milestone that attests to its enduring place in European cultural life. This year, celebrated director Michael Marmarinos assumes the Festival’s three-year artistic directorship, launching what he describes as an exciting three-year programme. Each edition will be a complete experience on its own, yet together they form a broader vision. He has called it a journey through time, creativity, and the transformative power of performance.
For now, only the programme for the Ancient Theatre of Epidaurus has been unveiled, offering a mix of classics, daring reinterpretations, and contemporary works that bring together Greek and international voices. Additional events and artistic actions will be revealed in time, promising further discoveries and delights. While this is the Epidaurus leg of the festival, its spirit extends far beyond, with a lively programme (ΤΒΑ) in Athens that celebrates theatre, music, dance, and creativity.
Check out what you can watch in the ancient amphitheatre:
Celebrated director Thomas Moschopoulos stages Ion as an enigmatic exploration of identity and belonging. Hovering between tragedy and irony, myth and realism, the play resonates strongly with contemporary uncertainty.
In Ion, Euripides weaves a gripping tale of divine secrets and human longing, as a young man raised at Apollo’s temple discovers the truth of his origins in a drama that explores identity, motherhood, and the fragile boundary between fate and free will.
Set at the Delphic oracle, a threshold between visible and invisible worlds, the production emphasises ambiguity and shifting perception. Truth and illusion overlap as the search for origins becomes a search for meaning itself.
Moschopoulos approaches Ion as a meditation on who we are when our history feels unstable and how identity is shaped in the space between knowledge and doubt.
Info
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Tickets: TBA
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Datum: -
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Time: 9 pm
- The Ancient Theatre of Epidaurus, Epidaurus, 210 52
- +30 275 302 2026
- Website