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Sex, austerity and mugs of vodka: how the Greek myth Iphigenia became a Welsh-language film sensation
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๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ง United Kingdomโ€ขJune 5, 2026

Sex, austerity and mugs of vodka: how the Greek myth Iphigenia became a Welsh-language film sensation

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Originally published byThe Guardian

The movie adaptation of Gary Owenโ€™s acclaimed play Iphigenia in Splott, Effi o Blaenau, is released this month. Here, its director and crew explain why they relocated the film to a post-industrial mining town โ€“ and refused to make it in English

The one-woman play Iphigenia in Splott was first performed in 2015. Eleven years on, Gary Owenโ€™s reworking of Greek tragedy, transplanted to working-class Splott in Cardiff, has earned its place as a modern classic. It reimagines the mythological heroine Iphigenia as Effie, a young woman filling her days drinking vodka out of a mug in her dressing gown. The play is about poverty and social inequality, closures and cuts, services scraped to the bone by austerity. Its most recent five-star Guardian review in 2022 advised: โ€œEveryone should see this.โ€

One person who did was Leisa Gwenllian, a final-year drama student from north Wales. โ€œI was on the front row with my mate,โ€ says Gwenllian, 24, drinking mint tea in a London hotel. โ€œI can remember thinking: wow! A Welsh woman with a strong Cardiff accent on the stage at the Lyric [in Hammersmith, London], thatโ€™s what itโ€™s all about.โ€ At the Oxford School of Drama, Gwenllian was mainly studying the classics alongside people with different accents and backgrounds from her own. โ€œTo see yourself on stage is really powerful.โ€

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