mon 14/07/2025

Shakespeare

A Midsummer Night's Dream, English National Opera

Just think, said a veteran enthusiast of Britten's operas when I showed him the earliest publicity designs for Christopher Alden's production, you could set them all in a school, even Gloriana - what about headmistress Bess and head prefect Essex?...

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Interview: Timothy Sheader, Artistic Director of Regent's Park Open Air Theatre

The Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre has always been one of London’s theatrical success stories, attracting luminaries from Flora Robson to Judi Dench, but over the past few years under the stewardship of artistic director Timothy Sheader, it has...

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Macbeth, Everyman Theatre, Liverpool

Has the King of Knotty Ash been usurped? I saw him embrace Shakespeare and play Malvolio here just 40 years ago. I’m talking about Ken Dodd, more used to playing the fool. Now, another upstart from Knotty Ash is even more ambitiously playing the...

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Precocity of Vice: 'Tis Pity She's a Whore returns

In the family: Sara Vickers and Damien Molony as the incestuous lovers in ''Tis Pity She's a Whore'

John Ford’s tragedy‘Tis Pity She’s a Whore, set in the Italian city of Parma, tells the story of a young brother and sister, Giovanni and Annabella, who discover a mutual love for each other and embark on a passionate sexual relationship. The...

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Classical CDs Weekly: De Sabata, Scarlatti, Violin/Viola Duets

Marital harmony: Husband and wife Thomas Zehetmair and Ruth Killius play violin-and-viola duets

This week we’ve offbeat violin and viola duets played by a renowned husband-and-wife duo, Scarlatti keyboard sonatas played on piano, and a very Italian take on Shakespeare from one of the 20th century’s fieriest conductors.Victor de Sabata: The...

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All's Well That Ends Well, Shakespeare's Globe

James Garnon's comic sidekick Parolles (right) steals the show from juve lead Sam Crane (centre) and Michael Bertenshaw's apoplectic Lafeu (left)

Trust the "wooden O" to set the Shakespearean record straighter than usual. In John Dove's production, this is no problem play but a bright comedy where the immaculate plotting proves more admirable than its questionable characters. Its low...

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The Tempest, Little Angel Theatre/ Royal Shakespeare Company

Parallel worlds: Puppet Caliban (Jonathan Dixon) with human Stephano (Brett Brown)

Puppetry has come a long way in this country. Once considered the domain of children’s theatre only, you’ll now be hard pushed to find a classical production where puppets are not used in some way. For this sea change we have to thank, amongst...

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In the Beginning Was the Word: The King James Bible 400th

The King James Bible, that great monument in the biography of the English language, is 400 years old this year. To use its own wording, it is as old as the hills, as old as Methuselah. Contemporaneous with Shakespeare, it has given us as many of the...

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The Tempest, Cheek By Jowl, Barbican Theatre

Tradition, in the form of Victorian performance, conferred on The Tempest the VC of Highest Shakespearean Poetry, though it probably wasn't Shakespeare's final play. John Gielgud was in an important sense the last great Victorian English thesp and,...

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Opinion: Please will you stop talking?

I can tell you the year (1983). I can tell you the theatre (the newly opened Barbican), the actors (Gambon, Sher), and the speech (“Blow, winds, and crack your cheeks!”). Hell, I can all but tell you the seat number. Lear and the Fool in the storm...

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Tempest

Shakespeare’s The Tempest is apparently a gift for the big screen. It's full of tricks, illusions, two half-humans and of course kicks off with a stonker of a storm: any film-maker might, particularly in this hi-tech epoch, give his or her eye teeth...

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As You Like It, Rose Theatre, Kingston

Best sit upstairs in the Rose for their new As You Like It, Stephen Unwin's first Shakespeare production in the three-year-old theatre, modelled on the Elizabethan principle. The tilted perspective helps a great deal with the sparse little bit of...

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