Skip to main content
Back to recommendations

SceneFiend library

Antigone

By Sophocles - Stage play

Stage playStage

Roles

  • Creon - Adult (36-50), Senior (>50), Male

About this piece

Creon declares that Polyneices' body won't be buried

Summary

Antigone is the sequel to Aeschylus' Seven Against Thebes. In Aeschylus' play two brothers, Eteocles and Polyneices, faced each other in battle for Thebe's throne and they both died in the battle. Creon, the new ruler of Thebes, declares that only Etiocles will be buried and Policeices' body will be left in the battlefield. Antigone, the sister of the two dead brothers, decides to defy Creon's decree and bury her brother. When Creon finds out he sentences her to death, even if she is his son's (Haemon) fiance´. Haemon tries to persuade him to change his mind to no avail. Antigone is buried alive in a cave. After listening to the advice of a blind prophet, Tiresias, and considering the negative reaction of the people of Thebes for his harsh sentence, Creon changes his mind. It is too late though, as Antigone and Haemon have taken their own lives. Hearing the news, Creon's wife, Eurydice, takes her life as well. Creon blames himself for what happened to his family, realizing that is his punishment for acting against the gods. In this monologue Creon makes his first appearance in the play. He declares his harsh sentence on Polyneices, that is his body won't be buried.

Tone

AngryPersuasiveDescriptiveGives ordersSpeechReminiscing life story/Telling a story

Use cases

classaudition
View on Actorama

Library metadata only. SceneFiend never includes script text here - pick up the published version to rehearse.

Similar pieces

  • good

    By good

    Shares same format: monologue, stage piece, solo.

  • Agamemnon

    By Aeschylus

    Shares same format: monologue, stage piece, Ancient Greek.

  • The Bacchae

    By Euripides

    Shares same format: monologue, stage piece, Ancient Greek.

  • Hecuba

    By Euripides

    Shares same format: monologue, stage piece, Ancient Greek.