#FinboroughForFree: Blueprint Medea
by Julia Pascal
by Julia Pascal


Blueprint Medea is an award-winning drama inspired by Euripides' Medea, exploring themes of passion, war, and cultural identity through the story of a Kurdish freedom fighter navigating life in London.
About The Event
About The Play
To view, please click here.
A subtitled version of this video is available to watch from our partners at Scenesaver, here.
To read all about the original Finborough Theatre production of Blueprint Medea, please click here.
NEW PRODUCTIONS ADDED EVERY MONTH. Please join our Mailing List to be informed of new releases.
We still face a very uncertain future. As a result of our closure, we have lost 98% of our income and we – together with many venues like ours and the artists who make them possible – are confronted with desperate financial hardship.
The future of the Finborough Theatre is in danger and we need your support to continue producing excellent and unique theatre for another 40 years.
Please consider donating to support us, here.
Kurdish freedom fighter Medea escapes the Turkish military and arrives at UK Border Control on a forged passport. Slipping through immigration, Medea discovers how to exist on the margins of London life. Working illegally as a cleaner in a gym, she meets Jason-Mohammed, the son of Iraqi immigrants. Their attraction results in the birth of twin boys. Medea believes that she has finally found a new home, a new family and a new life.
But when Jason-Mohammed’s father decides that his son must marry Glauke, an Iraqi cousin, Medea realises that she will lose both her sons and her safe haven in the UK.
As her whole world falls apart, she is forced to accept that she has nothing to lose by revenging herself – destroying the lives who those who have betrayed her and keeping her sons’ spirits with her forever…
Based on interviews with Kurdish fighters living in the UK, and written and directed by the first woman ever to direct at the National Theatre, Blueprint Medea is an award-winning new drama loosely inspired by Euripides’ Medea, which connects the classical to the contemporary to explore eternal questions of passion, war, cultural identity, women’s freedom, sex, family and love.