Dramatic versions •
Joe Orton's play
The Erpingham Camp (television broadcast 27 June 1966; opened at the
Royal Court Theatre on 6 June 1967) relocates
The Bacchae to a British
holiday camp. An author's note states: "No attempt must be made to reproduce the various locales in a
naturalistic manner. A small, permanent set of Erpingham's office is set on a high level. The rest of the stage is an unlocalised area. Changes of scene are suggested by lighting and banners after the manner of the
Royal Shakespeare Company's productions of
Shakespeare's
histories." • In 1970,
Brian De Palma filmed
Richard Schechner's dramatic re-envisioning of the work,
Dionysus in 69, in a converted garage. •
Wole Soyinka adapted the play as
The Bacchae of Euripides: A Communion Rite with the British
Royal National Theatre in London in 1973, incorporating a second chorus of slaves to mirror the civil unrest in his native
Nigeria. •
Caryl Churchill and
David Lan used the play as the basis of their 1986
dance-theatre hybrid
A Mouthful of Birds. • In 1989
Costas Ferris adapted
The Bacchae for his film
Oh Babylon and retells it in a more modern guise. •
Andre Gregory related in
My Dinner With Andre that he put on a production at
Yale University and campaigned to have a real cadaver's head used for Pentheus', but the actress playing Agave refused. •
The Bacchae 2.1, a theatrical adaptation set in modern times, was written by
Charles Mee and first performed in 1993. • Swedish director
Ingmar Bergman directed
The Bacchae three times: as an opera (1991) for the Royal Swedish Opera, as a film (1993) for Sveriges Television, and on stage (1996) for the Royal Dramatic Theatre in Stockholm. These three versions received great acclaim amidst some mixed reviews. '
The Bacchae, 1997, Los Angeles • In 1997,
Brad Mays directed his own adaptation of the play at The Complex in
Los Angeles, where it broke all box office records and was nominated for three
LA Weekly Theater Awards: for Best Direction, Best Musical Score and Best Production Design. Because it featured levels of violence and nudity rare for even experimental theater, it was widely discussed in print, and even videotaped for the
Lincoln Center's
Billy Rose Theatre Collection in New York. The production was eventually made into an independent
feature film which featured Will Shepherd – the Pentheus of
Richard Schechner's ''
Dionysus in '69'' – as Cadmus. Both the stage and film versions were produced by Mays' wife,
Lorenda Starfelt. • On 20 April 2003
BBC Radio 3 premiered the
radio play Dionysos – a ninety-minute drama based on
The Bacchae – written by
Andrew Rissik and starring
Chiwetel Ejiofor, with
Paul Scofield as Cadmus,
Toby Stephens as Pentheus and
Diana Rigg as Agave. It was repeated on
BBC Radio 7 in May 2008. • In 2004, KneeHigh Theatre company toured a reinvented version of The Bacchae as "A contemporary postmodern folk tale", directed by Emma Rice. • In 2007,
David Greig wrote an adaptation of
The Bacchae for the
National Theatre of Scotland starring
Alan Cumming as
Dionysus, with ten soul-singing followers in place of the traditional
Greek chorus. A critically praised run at
New York's
Lincoln Center Rose Theater followed the premiere in
Scotland. •
Luigi Lo Cascio's multimedia adaptation
La Caccia (The Hunt) won the Biglietto d'Oro del Teatro prize in 2008. The free adaptation combines live theater with animations by Nicola Console and Desideria Rayner's video projections. A revised 2009 version went on tour with original music by
Andrea Rocca. • In 2008, James Thomas directed Peter Arnott's faithful and audience-friendly translation of
The Bacchae as part of MacMillan Films series on Greek drama. The production featured Mia Perovetz as
Dionysus, a traditional
Greek chorus with Morgan Marcum as the chorus leader and the dance choreography of Angessa Hughmanick. • In 2017,
Madeleine George's adaptation
Hurricane Diane premiered at
Two River Theater.
Hurricane Diane places the narrative in Monmouth, New Jersey, where Dionysus becomes Diane, a butch landscaper who schemes to install permaculture gardens in suburban backyards, and convince four women to start a "mystery cult" in order to regain her powers and fight climate change. • In 2020, the Classics department of
King's College London performed a version of
The Bacchae in its original ancient Greek in combination with Aristophanes'
The Frogs, created by David Bullen and entitled
Dionysus in the Underworld for their annual Greek play, which is the only production of Greek drama in the UK staged annually in the original language. • In 2023, Sleepwalk immersive debuted immersive production 'Bacchanalia' based upon the play in the crypt of St Peters Church, Bethnal Green. • In 2024, toured ("The bingo-playing women of Euripides"), a free version in which Dionysus appears as a woman, Dionisia, among a group of middle-aged women from
Cádiz, Spain, meeting for clandestine bingo games and opposed by a local policeman. The play adds elements from the
carnival of Cádiz. • A new adaptation is being produced by the
Royal National Theatre in London in 2025.
Operatic versions • In 1941,
Giorgio Federico Ghedini began composing an opera in Italian based on
The Bacchae and called
Le Baccanti, with libretto by playwright and screenwriter
Tullio Pinelli. It debuted at
La Scala in Milan on February 22, 1948. It was revived in Milan in 1972. •
Harry Partch composed an opera based on
The Bacchae titled
Revelation in the Courthouse Park. It was first performed in 1960, and a recording was released in 1987. • Another opera based on
The Bacchae, called
The Bassarids, was composed in 1965 by
Hans Werner Henze. The libretto was by
W. H. Auden and
Chester Kallman. •
John Buller composed an opera
Bakxai (The Bacchae) which was produced at the English National Opera in London in 1992. The Libretto was in ancient Greek. •
Georgia Spiropoulos composed a solo opera for performer, electronics and lights called Les Bacchantes. The work premiered at
Ircam during the 2010 Agora Festival, starring
Médéric Collignon. •
Karol Szymanowski's second opera
King Roger is based on
The Bacchae. •
Daniel Börtz' opera
Backanterna (Swedish for the Bacchae) is based on
The Bacchae. The opera premiered at the
Royal Swedish Opera in
Stockholm in 1991. The music was used in
Ingmar Bergman's 1993 TV opera film.
Musical versions •
Gustav Holst's "Hymn to Dionysus" (Op. 31, No. 2) is a setting for female voices and orchestra of the
parodos from
The Bacchae in the translation by
Gilbert Murray. It was composed in 1913 and premiered in 1914. • In Fall 2007, Prospect Theater Company put on
The Rockae, a rock musical adaption of the show written by
Peter Mills & Cara Reichel • In Summer 2009, the Public Theater (of New York City) produced a version of
The Bacchae with music by
Philip Glass. • In Fall 2013,
Shakespeare's Globe produced a musical adaptation of
The Bacchae,
The Lightning Child, written by
Ché Walker. Music was scored by
Arthur Darvill.
Film versions • In 1961 Italian filmmaker
Giorgio Ferroni directed his own adaptation of the tragedy as
Le baccanti, with French actor
Pierre Brice as Dionysus, Italian actors
Alberto Lupo and
Miranda Campa respectively as Pentheus and Agave, Finnish actress-dancer
Taina Elg as Dirce, and Russian actor
Akim Tamiroff as Tiresias. American choreographer
Herbert Ross directed the bacchantes' dance sequences. • In 1970 American filmmaker
Brian De Palma and theater director
Richard Schechner filmed the stage adaptation ''
Dionysus in '69'', performed by members of
The Performance Group, an experimental theater group in New York that would later become
The Wooster Group. ==Religious significance==