Hadestown

Touted as a "folk opera", Hadestown is a musical and (more famously) a Concept Album written and produced by Anais Mitchell. It's a retelling of the Orpheus myth set in a post-apocalyptic world that mimics The Great Depression in the United States. Originally performed as a small-scale stage musical in Vermont, Mitchell extensively revised the work for the 2010 recording, which received critical acclaim. The album version has since been performed live at various locations, including New York and Virginia.

Hadestown opens above-ground, with Eurydice worrying about how her lover Orpheus will provide for her in this poverty-stricken post-apocalyptic world. They arrive at an old train depot, where everyone’s talking about Hadestown, a walled city under the ground. Hades, the enigmatic king of Hadestown, comes calling for Eurydice when Orpheus is gone and seduces her to the wealth and security of his underworld. With directions from Hermes, Orpheus follows Eurydice underground.

Meanwhile, in Hadestown, Hades indoctrinates his worker-citizens, but when he turns his back, his wife Persephone subverts his efforts by plying her contraband from the outside world in a hidden speakeasy. She takes an interest in the newly arrived Orpheus. Eurydice, unaware that her lover is near, laments her decision to follow Hades. Orpheus moves toward her, but is intercepted by the Fates, who tell him struggling is pointless. Orpheus challenges the Fates, and shortly thereafter Hades discovers both Orpheus and the speakeasy.

In the royal bedroom, Persephone appeals to her husband on Orpheus’s behalf. Orpheus, too, appeals to Hades, and his singing starts a riot in Hadestown. Desperate, Hades comes up with a plan: Orpheus can have Eurydice back if he can walk out of the underworld ahead of her without turning around to make sure she’s there. Orpheus and Eurydice begin their ascent, but when Orpheus reaches the surface, he immediately turns around. Since Eurydice is still in the underworld, she becomes permanently trapped there, and Orpheus is left to Walk the Earth alone.

The album stars Mitchell as Eurydice, Justin Vernon (of Bon Iver) as Orpheus, Ani DiFranco as Persephone, Greg Brown as Hades, Ben Knox Miller (of The Low Anthem) as Hermes, and the Haden Triplets as the Fates.

Since the album's conception, multiple stagings of Hadestown have emerged, with the Broadway staging sweeping th2 2019 Tony awards. Its performance of "Wait for Me" brought down the house. Reeve Carney played Orpheus in the original Broadway Cast, while Patrick Page played Hades. The show closed down briefly for the pandemic but has since reemerged.

"Persephone: Six feet under getting under your skin/Cabin fever is a-setting in"
 * Adaptation Distillation: The album is a revision/adaptation of a small-scale stage musical (also by Anais Mitchell) that had two runs in Vermont.
 * All There in the Manual: To fully understand the setting and plot, you need to read the history and libretto on the official website.
 * Alternate Character Interpretation: Hadestown encourages the listener to question whether the characters are innocent or at fault for what happens to them, especially in the case of Eurydice. We also see different interpretation of them in contrast to their characters in the myth:
 * Orpheus was originally a demigod and a romantic, but definitely well-intentioned when going into the Underworld. It's implied he used his connections to get Eurydice back. This Orpheus is even more naive, who gets his spirit broken when realizing that Eurydice left him for Hadestown willingly.
 * Eurydice in the original myth is The Ingenue that ended up dying via snakebite. As a result, she lacks agency in the story. Hadestown gives her more to do by showing that she had to struggle to survive, for a bite to eat or firewood.
 * Hades by far is probably the only god that isn't cheating on his wife or preying on the innocent. Sure he kidnapped Persephone, but from what we know, the one time he either had an affair or was a subject of interest for Menthe ended badly for Menthe. This version of Hades preys on the vulnerable luring them to Hadestown with a promise of food and boarding.
 * Hermes as the messenger god was a thief and a rapist, chasing down women who didn't want him. This Hermes is more of the Only Sane Man who looks out for his nephew. In fact, he seems bound to the rules to assist Hades by blowing the train whistle for him, and has to bend the rules to give Orpheus directions to Hadestown.
 * Bad Samaritan: Hades.
 * Basso Profundo: Greg Brown as Hades. His voice has been described as "subterranean."
 * Be Careful What You Wish For: Eurydice wanted to "lie down forever."
 * Big Bad: Hades.
 * Break the Cutie: What poverty and starvation, plus Hades, does to Eurydice.
 * Broken Bird: Persephone.
 * BSOD Song: "Flowers (Eurydice's Song)" for Eurydice. "If It's True" and "Doubt Comes In" for Orpheus. "His Kiss, The Riot" for Hades.
 * Cabin Fever: In "Our Lady of the Underground."

"Hades: Nothing makes a man so bold/As a woman's smile and a hand to hold/But all alone his blood runs thin/And doubt comes-- [Hesitant Dramatic Pause] doubt comes in."
 * Call-and-Response Song: "Why We Build The Wall."
 * Counterpoint Duet: "How Long."
 * Crapsack World
 * Crowd Song: "Why We Build The Wall."
 * Deal with the Devil: Orpheus makes one with Hades, as in the original myth. Rather, he agrees to try Hades's trial so as to save Eurydice.
 * Destructive Romance: Hades and Persephone, touched upon in "How Long."
 * Downer Ending: No matter what, Orpheus will always look back too early, just as Eurydice is about to leave Hades's domain. Then Hermes restarts the tale, undoing any character development, in the hopes that this time the tale will end happier.
 * Drone of Dread: At the end of "Doubt Comes In," there is a painfully long note when Orpheus looks back at Eurydice too early, breaking his Deal with the Devil.
 * Empire with a Dark Secret: Hades' wall isn't keeping out any enemy...
 * Even Evil Has Loved Ones: Hades truly loves Persephone, and the London version has her confirm that she followed him into Hadestown; he never kidnapped her. Persephone tries to use what remains of their love to convince Hades to release Eurydice from her contract.
 * Evil Sounds Deep: Oh, yes.
 * Final Love Duet: "Doubt Comes In."
 * The Gods Must Be Lazy: Persephone is supposed to usher in the spring, but she's had a habit of arriving when summertime is due and doing that instead. All the while she is sloshed to the nines and constantly taking sips from various mug glasses.
 * Greek Mythology
 * Great Wall: A great wall surrounds Hadestown. All the workers build the wall, and they sing under Hades's spell that the wall gives them work and protects them from those without jobs, who are jealous that they have a wall. The Fates reveal to Eurydice -- after she signed some paperwork Hades gave her in the privacy of his office-- that Hades goes out into the world, preys on the vulnerable and hungry, and lures them to Hadestown to have a constant labor force. She has constant meals now, but a lifetime of servitude and forgetting her name and past.
 * Grief Song: Inverted with "I Raise My Cup to Him," as Persephone and Eurydice sing a "reverse elegy" for Orpheus, who escaped Hadestown but now must Walk the Earth alone.
 * Guttural Growler: Greg Brown as Hades.
 * Heartbeat Soundtrack/Playing the Heart Strings: "Doubt Comes In."
 * I Will Find You: Orpheus to Eurydice in "Wait For Me."
 * The Ingenue: Eurydice.
 * Let's Duet: Many of the songs -- "Wedding Day," "Hey Little Songbird," "Wait For Me," "How Long," "Doubt Comes In," and "I Raise My Cup To Him."
 * Manipulative Bastard: Hades.
 * Massive Multiplayer Ensemble Number: "Way Down Hadestown," through and through.
 * Melismatic Vocals: Anais Mitchell as Eurydice, particularly in "Flowers (Eurydice's Song)."
 * Minimalist Cast: There's Eurydice, Orpheus, Persephone, Hades, Hermes, and the Fates.
 * Mood Dissonance: "When The Chips Are Down" is a fatalistic but very jaunty and catchy song.
 * Mr. Exposition: Hermes's main function.
 * Not So Different: In a heroic example, Orpheus to Hades in "Epic (Part Two)."
 * Hades, about Orpheus, from "His Kiss, The Riot," though he is recognizing the similarity to Orpheus in himself rather than persuading Orpheus of their similarities.

"Hades: Always a pity for one so pretty and young/When poverty comes to clip your wings/And knock the wind right out of your lungs..."
 * Orphean Rescue:
 * Sadistic Choice: So do you walk out of this capitalist hellhole and trust that its owner will release your wife, on the condition that you don't look back until you are both outside? Or do you leave your wife to rot without even trying? Orpheus knows that Hades can't be trusted, but he and Eurydice have to try.
 * Self-Backing Vocalist: Justin Vernon as Orpheus (see Voice of the Legion).
 * Shame If Something Happened: "Hey Little Songbird."

"Hermes: Either get to hell or to Hadestown/Ain't no difference any more!"
 * Silk Hiding Steel: Persephone.
 * The Song Before the Storm: "His Kiss, The Riot".
 * Soprano and Gravel: Eurydice and Hades in "Hey Little Songbird."
 * Star-Crossed Lovers: Orpheus and Eurydice.
 * Sympathy for the Devil: Persephone in "How Long," about both Orpheus and Hades.
 * Tenor Boy: Orpheus.
 * Villain Love Song: "Hey Little Songbird," in which Hades seduces Eurydice.
 * Villainous Lament: "How Long," in which a surprisingly vulnerable Hades shows bitter regret not for his villainous deeds, but for the dysfunctional nature of his marriage. What's tragic is that both Hades and Persephone seem to truly love each other even as that damaged love pains and tortures them.
 * Villainous Valor: Hades can't help but admire that Orpheus, after receiving a soul-crushing beating, gets back up and starts a riot. He allows Orpheus to plead for his wife's fate, threatening him that after the song is done, he will kill the "young man".
 * Voice of the Legion: Orpheus, to indicate his divine musical talent.
 * Wedding Day: "Wedding Song," natch.
 * What You Are in the Dark: In "Hey Little Songbird," Hades tempts Eurydice. The Fates also use this in "When The Chips Are Down."
 * Wide-Eyed Idealist: Eurydice and Orpheus both have elements of this at the start. "Epic, Part Two" and "How Long?" imply that Persephone used to be this, too.
 * Women Are Wiser: Eurydice in "Wedding Song," voicing her concerns for Orpheus's monetary situation. Subverted thereafter, as Eurydice's concerns and her overall innocence lead to her seduction and subsequent imprisonment by Hades.
 * Wretched Hive: Hadestown.