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Author Archives: Sylvia Morris
Shakespeare and the strangers: Refugee Week
This week, 18-24 June 2018, has been Refugee Week in the UK . This is its twentieth year, timed to coincide with the worldwide Refugee Day, 20 June. The need to remember the plight of refugees is just as acute, … Continue reading
Posted in Legacy, Shakespeare's World
Tagged British Black and Asian Shakespeare, Michelle Terry, Refugee Day, Refugee Week, refugees, Shakespeare's Globe, Sir Thomas More, The Stranger's Case, Tony Howard, University of Warwick
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Donmar’s all-female Shakespeare Trilogy comes to TV
I’ve written a number of blog posts, over several years, about Phyllida Lloyd’s all-female Shakespeare trilogy that began at the Donmar Warehouse theatre in London. One’s here, and here’s another. It wasn’t an obvious trilogy, starting with Julius Caesar, then … Continue reading
Posted in Plays and Poems, Shakespeare on Stage
Tagged all-female, BBC, Donmar Warehouse, gender, Harriet Walter, iPlayer, Julius Caesar, Phyllida Lloyd
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Philip Massinger re-read: #MassiMara
It’s become a tradition now for the Shakespeare Institute in Stratford-upon-Avon to spend most of June reading the surviving works of writers contemporary with Shakespeare. In 2018, beginning on 11 June, it’s the turn of Philip Massinger, one of the … Continue reading
Posted in Legacy, Shakespeare's World
Tagged A new Way to pay Old Debts, Adrian Noble, Edmund Kean, Emrys James, John Fletcher, Philip Massinger, Shakespeare Institute, The King's Men, The Other Place
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Rehabilitating Shakespeare’s “she-wolf of France”, Margaret of Anjou
For many years attempts have been made to establish that Richard III was not the out and out villain that Shakespeare presents to us, a difficult task since Richard III is one of his most compelling characters in a … Continue reading
Posted in Plays and Poems, Sources
Tagged Edward Hall, Henry VI, In Our Time, Margaret of Anjou, Richard III, sources, Trojan War
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Anthony Hopkins’ King Lear
The Shakespeare event of the Bank Holiday weekend is the new version of King Lear to be screened by BBC2 on Monday 28 May 2018. And hopefully people won’t be too tired after a day having fun to tune in, … Continue reading
Posted in Plays and Poems, Shakespeare on Stage
Tagged Anthony Hopkins, Antony Sher, BBC, Ian McKellen, King Lear, Reg Foakes, Richard Eyre
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The Old Vic at 200
11 May 2018 is the 200th anniversary of the opening of one of the most important theatres in the UK, known as the Old Vic. It was originally named the Royal Coburg Theatre, after Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg and his … Continue reading
Posted in Legacy, Shakespeare on Stage
Tagged Lilian Baylis, London, Matthew Warchus, National Theatre, Old Vic, theatre
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Shakespeare’s spring
One of the greatest pleasures of spring in England is watching life returning over weeks or even months, beginning in gardens and parks with the blooming of snowdrops, moving on to daffodils, apple blossom and bluebells, to the mighty trees, … Continue reading
Posted in Legacy, Shakespeare's World, Stratford-upon-Avon
Tagged gardens, Glyn Jones, herbals, plants, Shakespeare Brithplace Trust, Shakespeare Club of Stratford-upon-Avon, spring
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Roger Howells remembered
Monday 23 April 2018 was the 402nd anniversary of Shakespeare’s death. By coincidence it was also the day that a very special man, a great Shakespearean and man of the theatre, Roger Howells, died at the age of 88. Most … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
2 Comments
Shakespeare and the actors
The annual Olivier Awards ceremony took place on 8 April 2018, and this year, sadly, there were no awards for any Shakespeare productions. Even more unusually, there were only three nominations, all for Robert Icke’s production of Hamlet at the … Continue reading
Posted in Shakespeare on Stage
Tagged Andrew Scott, Antony Sher, Benedict Cumberbatch, Ian McKellen, Nimah Cusack, Olivier Awards, Paterson Joseph
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