LEWISTON — New York City-based director Peter Richards helms the Bates College production of “Big Love,” a modern adaptation of an ancient Greek drama, to be staged in early November.

Playwright Charles Mee’s inspiration for “Big Love” was the ancient Greek drama “The Suppliant Maidens,” in which 50 daughters of an Egyptian king flee Egypt to illegally avoid marriage to their cousins.

Transposing this plot into modern times, “Big Love” raises issues of gender politics, love and domestic violence as Lydia and 49 of her sisters flee from Greece to an Italian manor to avoid a similar marriage arrangement with cousins.

“There is so much to engage with in this play,” Richards said. “There’s comedy, drama, singing, dancing, over-the-top theatricality. And there are moments of simple sincerity and silence. There’s something for everyone. And it’s all about love.”

“The more outlandish the show gets, the more immediate its impact,” wrote New York Times reviewer Alvin Klein. “For here is surprise, astonishment and adventure, restored to theater.”

Richards, a stage and television actor, knows the playwright through their work together on another Mee piece. In “Big Love,” he said, Mee is exploring “a way of being in the world with other people that is quite a bit different from how many of us live our lives.”

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It’s a style of living that’s immediate, sensuous, uncomplicated, loving and fearless — “it seeks to explore the whole of life, including the ugly parts, and embraces life as a series of spontaneously appearing opportunities,” Richards said. “And that view of life as something unplanned is reflected in Mee’s narrative structure.”

“Big Love” affords a fun challenge for the performers. It’s an extremely physical play,”Richards said. “Actors fling themselves onto the floor, throw things, jump on each other, sing, dance and otherwise express themselves in ways unlike what people often expect to see in the theater.”

Richards and Bates connected through Opera House Arts in Stonington, where he has directed five productions in recent years. Doing design work for the company was Bates’ managing director of theater and dance, Michael Reidy.

In New York City, Richards has performed with the Metropolitan Opera and American Repertory Theater, among other companies. His television credits include roles in “Law and Order: SVU” and “As the World Turns.” He is a founding member of the Brooklyn-based experimental theater company Conni’s Avant Garde Restaurant.

Among the cast members is Nancy Salmon, assistant director of the Bates Dance Festival, playing opposite her husband, Maine State Rep. David C. Webster.

The production features choreography by Carol Dilley, associate professor of dance and director of the college dance program; and scenic and costume design by B. Christine McDowell, associate professor of theater.

Performances will be at 7:30 p.m. Thursday through Saturday, Nov. 1-3, and Monday, Nov. 5; and 2 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, Nov. 3-4, in Gannett Theater, 305 College St. 

Admission is $6 for the general public, $3 for students and seniors. For tickets, call 786-6161 or visit batestickets.com. For more information,call 786-8294.


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