This rich turbulent piece, which starts as folk comedy and ends as Greek tragedy, takes on board an abundance of ideas: identity, tradition, the passage from life to death ... Soyinka's play is as much philosophical as political.
Michael Billington, The Guardian
Based on events in 1940s Nigeria, the story attains a more classically tragic power in showing two forces unable to understand each other. On one side there is the Yoruba culture, in which the death of a king is followed by the suicide of his favoured liegeman . . . on the other, the powers that be with their contrary code that suicide is illegal and to be prevented, even if it costs more lives.
Ian Shuttleworth, Financial Times
Wole Soyinka's play is one of the great creations of 20th-century theatre: it has the fire, grandeur, cruelty and humanity of Greek tragedy, the moral cutting edge of modern political thinking, and the African writer's take on his own people's values: loving mocking, ironical and ruthlessly observant ... Soyinka writes with the moral ambivalence and relentless questioning of Shakespeare.
John Peter, The Sunday Times
A transfixing work of modern world drama.
The Independent
Clearly a masterpiece ... Soyinka achieves the full impact of Greek tragedy.
Irving Wardle, Independent on Sunday
The action of the play is as inevitable and eloquent as in <i>Antigone</i>: a clash of values and cultures so fundamental that tragedy issues: a tragedy for each individual, each tribe.
Michael Schmidt, Daily Telegraph