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“O dear companion”

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In a scene based on Ovid’s story of Baucis and Philemon—in which the gods’ faith in mankind is restored by the devotion and generosity of a poor, elderly couple—Sarah Williams ’08 (left) is Baucis, Greg O’Kane ‘08 (right) is Philemon, and Lindsey Simcik ’10 (center) plays the Narrator. The couple has been granted a divine favor and must decide what to request. They ask to serve as priests and to die at the same moment so that, in Philemon’s words, “I never have to see my wife’s grave, nor she have to bury me.” The tale ends as they die, with the words “Farewell, O dear companion” on their lips, and change into trees whose branches intertwine.

Playwright Mary Zimmerman, recipient of a McArthur “genius” grant, created the play as a student production at Northwestern University. When it was staged on Broadway, Time called it the “theater event of the year” and Zimmerman won a Tony for her direction. “In Metamorphoses we examine the myths that gave instruction to countless human beings throughout the ages,” writes the Theater Department’s Luke Jorgensen, director of the University’s production. “Metamorphoses juxtaposes the ancient and the contemporary in both language and image to reflect the variety and persistence of love in the face of inevitable change.”

Visit the Robsham Theater website for more information.

Photograph: Lee Pellegrini


One Response to ““O dear companion””

  1. Mary MacIntyre Says:

    Hi,
    Who is authoring this blog? Nicely done.
    Imagine how fun this could be if 4 women were writing a veiw type column here too. Could there be 5 new BC students working on a new play as well? What’s going on in BC’s theatre department nowadays? Anyway campuses can be a hotbed of creativity. Meanswhile in a land that moves in a slower pace, older folks are creating theatre, travelling troupes,improvisatonal scenes, odd plays, replays of classics: more than I can fit into my budget. Come learn more about other arts to at: http://www.about-albuquerquenm.com. Thanks, Mary MacIntyre

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Boston College ("BC") is a private research university located in Chestnut Hill, MA, 6 miles west of downtown Boston. BC was founded as a liberal arts college and preparatory school in 1863 by the Society of Jesus in Boston's South End before moving to its current location in 1913. The university's historic campus is one of the earliest examples of the Collegiate Gothic architectural style in North America. BC is one of the oldest Jesuit, Catholic institutions in the United States, and is home to one of the largest Jesuit populations in the world. It also hosts one of the world's most prominent Catholic theological and philosophical faculties.

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