About Salome

A despotic king lusts for his step-daughter. An impetuous princess lusts for a prophet. A loyal soldier lusts for his comrade-in-arms. Oscar Wilde definitely turned up the heat when he penned his early-career masterpiece, the verse drama Salome. And in truth, this script proved so rich in passion that Wilde chose to write it in French (though the English censors eventually stepped in). For Imago's exciting new production, Imago Co-Founder Jerry Mouawad will revive the once-controversial tragedy and, in the process, reveal one of the world's wittiest playwrights to be one of its most compelling poets of the stage, as well.

Mouawad isn't the first artist drawn to Wilde's image-rich play, either. Directors as varied as Yukio Mishima and Max Reinhardt have staged noteworthy versions, while composer Richard Strauss utilized Wilde's text for his famed opera's libretto. Even film auteur Ken Russell lifted repeatedly from Wilde's text when creating his irresistibly campy flick Salome's Last Dance starring Glenda Jackson. Indeed, Salome's tawdry tale – and John the Baptist's decapitation – have had a timeless, universal appeal over the centuries. Old masters like da Vinci, Caravaggio, and Titian were once seduced by these subjects as were musicians like Andrew Lloyd Webber, Liz Phair, Regina Spektor, and John Cale. With Imago's upcoming Salome, Portland audiences will finally get to see what makes Wilde's poetic play so wildly enjoyable.

"... a byword for controversy." — The Guardian

"... the most daring and experimental of Oscar Wilde's plays." — The Telegraph 

Imago Theatre

Carol Triffle and Jerry Mouawad, the creators of Imago, have been called alchemists, magicians, theatrical animators, and physical comedians.

Defying classification, they have populated the stage with characters and beings such as comedic amphibians, acrobatic larvae, circus boulders, and metamorphosing humans in works which tantalize the senses, the intellect, and the passions. From adaptations of classics to excursions into vaudevillian existentialism, Imago's repertoire is as vast as the forms they shape. With commissions for stage, film, and television, Imago blurs the lines of the expected to break new ground, exploding performance boundaries yet maintaining humor and humanity.

Imago Theatre tours internationally while also producing a season at its home base in Portland, Oregon. The company's critically-acclaimed productions FROGZ and ZooZoo have played at the prestigious New Victory Theatre in NYC's Broadway district.