Royal Shakespeare Company
11 December 2013 – 29 March 2014
Directed by Jeremy Herrin
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Hilary Mantel’s Man Booker Prize Winning Novels, Wolf Hall and Bring Up the Bodies are adapted for the stage by Mike Poulton and directed by Jeremy Herrin.
Royal Shakespeare Company
19 December 2013 – 29 March 2014
Directed by Jeremy Herrin
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Hilary Mantel’s Man Booker Prize Winning Novels, Wolf Hall and Bring Up the Bodies are adapted for the stage by Mike Poulton and directed by Jeremy Herrin.
Scrawny Cat Theatre
1st – 26th April 2014
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Notorious villain, child murderer, hated despot. Richard III was evil, or so Shakespeare told us. But history tells another tale.
Who was he really? A dangerous tyrant or a dutiful king?
Who was the man found in the car park when all the stories are done?
Scrawny Cat Theatre Company’s unique, site specific production of Richard III will explore just that. Down among the foundations of The Rose Bankside – the theatre Shakespeare began his career in – puppets, music and physical theatre will bring history to life and let one of England’s most debated figures finally have his say.
Scrawny Cat Theatre
1st – 26th April 2014
[button url=”http://scrawnycat.co.uk/richard-iii/” target=”blank”]Buy Tickets[/button]
Notorious villain, child murderer, hated despot. Richard III was evil, or so Shakespeare told us. But history tells another tale.
Who was he really? A dangerous tyrant or a dutiful king?
Who was the man found in the car park when all the stories are done?
Scrawny Cat Theatre Company’s unique, site specific production of Richard III will explore just that. Down among the foundations of The Rose Bankside – the theatre Shakespeare began his career in – puppets, music and physical theatre will bring history to life and let one of England’s most debated figures finally have his say.
Shakespeare’s Globe Theater
5 – 10 May (performed in Gujarati)
[button url=”https://tickets.shakespearesglobe.com/selecteics.asp” target=”blank”]Buy Tickets[/button]When Bharatram (Bertram) flees his native Gujarat for Bombay, his mother’s ward Heli (Helena), desperately in love, decides to pursue him. But Bharatram feels differently, and attaches two obstructive conditions to their marriage – conditions he is sure will never be met.
20th-century India stands in for Renaissance France in this joyful, imaginative production of a play that reverses all the usual expectations of Shakespearean comedy.