Calendar

Jul
12
Sat
The Two Gentlemen of Verona – RSC
Jul 12 @ 5:45 pm – Sep 4 @ 6:45 pm
Jul
17
Thu
Romeo & Juliet – Shakespeare & Co., US East
Jul 17 @ 6:00 pm – Aug 23 @ 7:00 pm
Jul
30
Wed
The White Devil, Royal Shakespeare Company
Jul 30 @ 5:30 am – Nov 29 @ 5:30 am

Royal Shakespeare Company

30 July – 29 November 2014

Directed by Maria Aberg

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Beautiful Vittoria begins an illicit affair, enlisting the help of her brother Flamenio to fool her husband. They soon find themselves snared in a web of corruption, passion and retribution as their pursuit of personal gain reaches an epic and bloody conclusion.  

Aug
2
Sat
Henry IV, Parts I & II, Shakespeare and Co.
Aug 2 @ 12:15 am – Aug 31 @ 1:15 am

Shakespeare & Company 

August 2–August 31, 2014

Written by WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE

directed by JONATHAN EPSTEIN

featuring MALCOLM INGRAM as Falstaff

 

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Aug
6
Wed
King Lear, Shakespeare’s Globe
Aug 6 @ 6:45 am – Dec 6 @ 7:45 am

Shakespeare’s Globe Theater

From 6 August (touring UK and USA)

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Old King Lear, weary of royal duties, proposes to break up his kingdom and divide it among his three daughters. But this rash generosity is cruelly repaid and Lear discovers too late the false values by which he has lived – and, in turn, the suffering common to all humanity.

Its tempestuous poetry shot through with touches of humour and moments of heart-rending simplicity, King Lear is one of the deepest artistic explorations of the human condition.

 

Aug
30
Sat
The Comedy of Errors – Shakespeare’s Globe, London
Aug 30 @ 4:45 am – Dec 7 @ 5:45 am

The Comedy of Errors

By William Shakespeare

Directed by Blanche McIntyre

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Take one pair of estranged twin brothers (both called Antipholus), and one pair of estranged twin servants (both called Dromio), keep them in ignorance of each other and throw them into a city with a reputation for sorcery, and you have all the ingredients for theatrical chaos. One Antipholus is astonished by his foreign hospitality; the other enraged by the hostility of his home town. The Dromios, caught between the two, are soundly beaten for obeying all the wrong orders.

Basing his plot on a farce by Plautus, Shakespeare caps the mayhem of his Roman original to build up a hectic tale of violent cross-purposes, furious slapstick and social nightmare.

This production will employ Renaissance costumes and staging.