Tragic Plays

The titles in the Tragic Plays Collection highlight the long tradition of exploring human suffering and folly through flawed characters and their downfalls. The Collection includes classic tragedies that reflect the genre's roots in ancient Greece, as well as Shakespearean selections and modern titles from playwrights like Tom Stoppard and August Wilson.

Genre Play, Fiction

Themes Family, Justice, Revenge, Siblings, Hate & Anger

Tags Tragedy, Mythology, Ancient Greece, Classical Period, Trauma & Abuse, Dramatic Literature, Fantasy, Classic Fiction

Publication year 1957

Genre Play, Fiction

Themes Loneliness, Family, Death, Future, Regret

Tags Tragedy, Comedy & Satire, Irish Literature, Absurdism, World History, Dramatic Literature, French Literature, Classic Fiction

Endgame is a one-act, absurdist play by Samuel Beckett, first performed in 1957. The post-apocalyptic play portrays the farcical, tragic existence of four character who are caught in an unfulfilling routine. Beckett regarded the play as one of his greatest achievements. It has been adapted as an opera and as a short film.This guide uses the 2009 Faber and Faber edition.Plot SummaryThe curtain rises on a nearly bare stage: a room in Hamm’s home, bathed... Read Endgame Summary

Publication year 1829

Genre Play, Fiction

Themes Death

Tags Classic Fiction, Tragedy

Faust, Part One is the first part of a two-part dramatic poem written by 18th-century German writer Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. Based loosely on the 16th-century legend of Faust, Faust, Part One was first published in 1808 and first performed onstage in its entirety in 1829. (Faust, Part Two was later published in 1832.) It is largely told in rhyming verse, except for Scene 26, which is written in prose. This study guide is based... Read Faust Summary

Genre Play, Fiction

Themes Revenge, War, Fate, Justice, Conflict, Hate & Anger

Tags Tragedy, Mythology, Ancient Greece, Classical Period, Grief & Death, European History, Trauma & Abuse, Dramatic Literature, Fantasy, Classic Fiction

Genre Play, Fiction

Themes War, Fate, Appearance & Reality

Tags Classic Fiction, Mythology, Tragedy, Dramatic Literature, Fantasy

Publication year -416

Genre Play, Fiction

Themes Fathers, Friendship, Emotions/Behavior: Courage, Perseverance, Fate, Justice

Tags Tragedy, Mythology, Ancient Greece, Classical Period

Publication year 428

Genre Play, Fiction

Themes Family, Justice, Fate, Truth & Lies, Sexual Identity, Daughters & Sons, Love

Tags Tragedy, Mythology, Ancient Greece, Classical Period

Hippolytus is a tragedy by Euripides, originally produced in Athens at the City Dionysia of 428 BCE. The tetralogy to which Hippolytus belonged earned Euripides the first prize that year. According to ancient authorities, this was Euripides’s second attempt at a play on the myth of Hippolytus, his earlier play having apparently horrified contemporary Athenians with its allegedly sensational depiction of Phaedra. Euripides’s original Hippolytus no longer survives, but the revised play quickly came to... Read Hippolytus Summary

Publication year 1599

Genre Play, Fiction

Tags Classic Fiction, Elizabethan Era, British Literature, Tragedy, Historical Drama, Education, Education, Dramatic Literature, Historical Fiction

Book DetailsThe Tragedy of Julius Caesar is a history play and tragedy written by William Shakespeare and first performed in 1599. The play dramatizes the events surrounding the 44 BCE assassination of Julius Caesar, a Roman general and statesman. Shakespeare’s main source material for the play was Plutarch’s Lives, a series of biographies of famous men, published in the second century CE and translated into English by Thomas North in 1579. Shakespeare sometimes deviated from... Read Julius Caesar Summary

Publication year 1636

Genre Play, Fiction

Themes Love, Loyalty & Betrayal, Justice

Tags Tragedy, Comedy & Satire, Arts & Culture, French Literature

Le Cid is a five-act tragicomic play by Pierre Corneille, first performed in 1636 at the Théâtre du Marais in Paris. The plot is based on the Spanish play Las mocedadas del Cid by Guillén de Castro, which itself is based on the legend of Rodrigo Diaz de Vivar (1043-1099), a Castilian knight and Spanish national hero whose title “El Cid” is derived from the Arabic word for lord, sayyid. Corneille (1606-1684) is considered one... Read Le Cid Summary

Publication year 1956

Genre Play, Fiction

Themes Family, Community, Siblings, Midlife

Tags Education, Education, American Literature, World History, Dramatic Literature, Classic Fiction, Drama, Tragedy, Life-Inspired Fiction, Addiction & Substance Abuse

Long Day’s Journey into Night is widely considered Eugene O’Neill’s best play. It was published posthumously under the pseudonym Tyrone and is an autobiographical work about O’Neill’s family. The play was originally published in 1956 with a first showing in Sweden that same year. The play has been adapted into film several times, including productions in 1962 and 1996, as well as television adaptations in 1973, 1982, and 1987. O’Neill was awarded the Nobel Prize... Read Long Day's Journey Into Night Summary

Genre Play, Fiction

Themes Power & Greed, Marriage

Tags Mythology, Tragedy, Classic Fiction, Ancient Greece, Education, Education, Dramatic Literature, Fantasy

Medea is a tragic play written by the ancient Greek playwright Euripides. It was composed in 431 BCE as Euripides’s entry for the Dionysia, an important religious festival and theatrical competition in the city of Athens. Though Medea placed third in the competition that year, it has since become one of Euripides’s most popular works, enjoying special attention for its nuanced treatment of revenge and domestic strife and for the complexity of its lead character... Read Medea Summary

Publication year 49

Genre Play, Fiction

Themes Revenge, Femininity, Family, Loyalty & Betrayal

Tags Tragedy, Mythology, Ancient Rome, Philosophy, Philosophy, Dramatic Literature, Classical Period, Fantasy, Classic Fiction

Publication year 60

Genre Play, Fiction

Themes Family, Politics & Government, Fate

Tags Tragedy, Mythology, Education, Education, Classical Period, Dramatic Literature, Fantasy, Classic Fiction

Publication year 401

Genre Play, Fiction

Themes Grief, Guilt, Regret, Aging, Death, Future, The Past, Daughters & Sons, Community, Religion & Spirituality

Tags Classical Period, Tragedy, Mythology, Ancient Greece

Oedipus at Colonus is an ancient Athenian tragedy composed by Sophocles in (it is widely believed) the last year of his life, approximately 406 BC. His grandson, who was named Sophocles after him, first produced the play in 401 BC at the Festival of Dionysus, also known as the Great Dionysia. Along with Oedipus Rex and Antigone, it is one of three surviving tragedies by Sophocles, known as the Theban plays, that retell episodes from... Read Oedipus at Colonus Summary

Genre Play, Fiction

Themes Family, Fate

Tags Tragedy, Mythology, Philosophy, Religion & Spirituality, Ancient Greece, Classic Fiction, Education, Education, Dramatic Literature, Fantasy

Sophocles’s play Oedipus Rex, first performed in the early-to-mid 400s BCE, is one of the most famous and influential tragedies left to us from the ancient Greek tradition. Based on the myth of Oedipus, whose cursed fate was to marry his mother and kill his father, the play explores themes of destiny, free will, and literal and metaphoric vision and blindness. This guide uses the 1984 Penguin edition of The Three Theban Plays, translated by... Read Oedipus Rex Summary

Genre Play, Fiction

Themes Fate, Revenge, Power & Greed

Tags Classic Fiction, Tragedy, Mythology, Ancient Greece, Dramatic Literature, Fantasy

Written in 458 BC by Greek playwright Aeschylus, The Oresteia is a trilogy of plays that includes Agamemnon, The Libation Bearers, The Eumenides, as well as the lost satyr play, Proteus. The plays of The Oresteia are classic tragedies, a dramatic genre focused on the piteous and cathartic downfall of great heroes. The plays were written to be performed at the City Dionysia festival which celebrated Dionysus, god of wine and theater. The festival was... Read Oresteia Summary

Publication year 409

Genre Play, Fiction

Themes Justice, Revenge

Tags Tragedy, Mythology, Ancient Greece, Dramatic Literature, Drama, Classical Period, World History, Fantasy, Classic Fiction

Publication year 1608

Genre Play, Fiction

Themes Femininity, Sexual Identity, Appearance & Reality, Daughters & Sons, Fathers, Politics & Government, Fate

Tags Classic Fiction, Tragedy, Comedy & Satire, Jacobean Era

Pericles, Prince of Tyre (circa 1608) is one of William Shakespeare’s late plays, co-written with Geroge Wilkins and forming part of a cycle of romances that includes Cymbeline and The Tempest. The play follows the wandering Prince Pericles as he flees an incestuous tyrant, survives shipwrecks, wins and loses love, and is ultimately reunited with his long-lost wife and daughter. Once regarded as difficult to stage, Pericles is now considered one of Shakespeare’s most experimental... Read Pericles Summary

Publication year 54

Genre Play, Fiction

Tags Tragedy, Mythology, Classical Period, Ancient Rome, Dramatic Literature, Drama, Education, Education, Fantasy, Philosophy, Philosophy, Classic Fiction

Phaedra is one of the 10 surviving Roman tragedies attributed to Lucius Annaeus Seneca. It was probably composed in the first half of the first century CE, during the time when the Julio-Claudian Dynasty was in power in Rome. Considered one of Seneca’s most influential plays, Phaedra tells the story of Phaedra’s disastrous and unrequited passion for her stepson Hippolytus, loosely drawing on Euripides’s much earlier Greek tragedy, Hippolytus. The play explores themes such as... Read Phaedra Summary