By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Media HydeMedia Hyde
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Blogs
  • Business & Commerce
  • Others
    • Religious
    • Metropolitan
    • Climate and Weather
Font ResizerAa
Media HydeMedia Hyde
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Blogs
  • Business & Commerce
  • Others
    • Religious
    • Metropolitan
    • Climate and Weather
Follow US
© 2025 Media Hyde Network. All Rights Reserved.
Entertainment

Absurdist Play Dreams of Ithaca Pushes Audiences Into Darkness And It’s Not for the Faint of Heart

Last updated: December 5, 2025 5:57 pm
Abdul Qavi
Share
SHARE

The lights hadn’t even dimmed when the warning arrived. “Intense violence will be shown,” the writer announced before the play began. It was less a disclaimer and more a challenge. Anyone uneasy with what was coming could leave. Most stayed.

What followed over the next 55 minutes was Dreams of Ithaca — an absurdist plunge into unease, disorientation, and quietly growing dread. Staged at the Arts Council of Pakistan Karachi as part of the World Culture Festival, the production has quickly earned a reputation for being one of the boldest theatrical experiments seen this year.

A journey built on confusion, humour, and fear

The play, written by Fawad Khan (not the actor) and directed by Sonil Shankar with Urdu adaptation by Kulsoom Aftab, refuses to tell a tidy story. Instead, it drops audiences into the lives of two unnamed characters, a man and a woman, whose bickering starts out harmless — petty irritations, mismatched rhythms, strange dialogues that loop back on themselves.

Then something shifts. A signal light appears. Mundane at first. Harmless. And then the scene unravels. The red light becomes a symbol of everything that traps them: frustration, fear, an unnameable kind of existential paralysis. Violence breaks through the surface with no warning. The mood switches from comedy to horror in a heartbeat.

Audience members weren’t just watching absurdism; they were living inside it.

A play that refuses to comfort

Absurdist theatre often deals with the meaninglessness of routine, the strangeness of human behaviour, the chaos beneath ordinary life. Dreams of Ithaca doesn’t flirt with those ideas. It drags you into them.

The two characters spiral through conversations that turn sharp, unsettling, strangely funny, then suddenly cruel. At times the tension is so thick that people in the hall reportedly stopped breathing for a moment, waiting for the next emotional swing.

Nothing feels stable. Not the characters. Not the stage. Not even the audience’s sense of what is real within the performance.

Why people are talking — and why some left early

The production’s intensity has sparked divided reactions.
Some viewers praised it as fearless, saying they hadn’t seen anything this psychologically raw on a Pakistani stage in years. Others called it disturbing, even overwhelming.

The creators seem entirely unbothered by the discomfort, perhaps even encouraged by it. The play isn’t meant to soothe. It isn’t trying to teach a clear moral lesson or wrap its themes neatly with a bow at the end. Instead, it sits with ambiguity: What is home? Where do we belong? Why do small fears grow into monsters when no one is looking?

The ending offers no answers. Just more questions.

A bold moment for local theatre

For Karachi’s theatre community, Dreams of Ithaca is a reminder that audiences here are ready — maybe even hungry — for work that’s challenging, surreal, and emotionally risky.
It pushes the boundaries of what mainstream theatre typically attempts, leaning into discomfort rather than avoiding it.

Is it enjoyable? That depends on your tolerance for chaos. But is it memorable? Absolutely.

There’s a reason critics keep repeating the same phrase: this play is not for the faint of heart.

Share This Article
Email Copy Link Print
Previous Article Pantone Names “Cloud Dancer” as the 2026 Colour of the Year, Marking a Shift Toward Calm Minimalism
Next Article Japan’s Former PM Accidentally Hard-Launches Justin Trudeau and Katy Perry’s Relationship
Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sponsored Ads

Stay Connected

FacebookLike
XFollow
InstagramFollow
YoutubeSubscribe
WhatsAppFollow
ThreadsFollow
A Modern Device Introduced At Civil Hospital Karachi For Immediate Diagnosis Of Jaundice In Newborns
Health
December 7, 2025
Dengue Cases Increase Across Sindh, 170 New Cases Reported; 16 New Patients Admitted to Karachi Division’s Public Hospitals
Health
December 7, 2025
A Rapid Increase In Congenital Heart Diseases Among Children In Pakistan
Health
December 7, 2025
The Number Of Diabetes Patients In Pakistan Reaches 34.5 Million, Situation Becomes Alarming
Health
December 7, 2025
World Cup 2026 Unveil: Full Road to Glory Revealed
Sports
December 6, 2025
India Clinch 9-Wicket Victory to Dominate Final ODI Against South Africa
Sports
December 6, 2025

You Might Also Like

Entertainment

Irshad Bhatti and Sama Raj Reveal Love Story on Eid Special

By Sameer Sheikh
Entertainment

Not Just Acting Anymore — Sonya Starts Creating

By Syeda Insherah
Entertainment

Astrologer’s Old Prediction About Neelam Muneer’s Wedding Comes True

By Ayesha
Entertainment

Ahmed Rafique Faces Backlash for Performance in Meri Bahuain

By Syeda Insherah
Media Hyde Media Hyde Dark
Facebook Twitter Youtube Rss Medium

About US

Media Hyde Network: Your instant connection to breaking stories and live updates. Stay informed with our real-time coverage across politics, tech, entertainment, and more. Your reliable source for 24/7 News.

Top Categories
  • Headline
  • Politics
  • Entertainment
  • Education
  • Sports
  • Religious
  • Metropolitan
  • Climate and Weather
Usefull Links
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookies Policy
  • Advertising Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

© 2025 Media Hyde Network. All Rights Reserved.

adbanner
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?