Showing topics: The Tempest
The Tempest — Shakespeare’s Globe
Shakespeare’s Globe (London) – Company Website: http://www.shakespearesglobe.com/
The Tempest
Prospero: Roger Allam
Antonio: Jason Baughan
Miranda: Jessie Buckley
Stephano: Sam Cox
The Tempest, Utah Shakespeare
Utah Shakespeare Company Website, tickets and information: http://www.bard.org/
Published on Jul 15, 2013
Promotional video of the play “The Tempest” by William Shakespeare at the utah Shakespeare Festival.
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OSF: Director Interview: Tony Taccone on “The Tempest” (1/2)
In this segment, Director Taccone talks about Shakespeare’s play and how he understands this masterpiece of revenge and forgiveness. This production will run from Feb. through November in 2014 in the Angus Bowmer Theatre.
Read More...OSF: Director Interview: Tony Taccone on “The Tempest” (2/2)
In this segment of the interview, Director Taccone discusses his thoughts about the production and the staging.
Read More...OSF: Choreography & Movement in “The Tempest”
Sonya Delwaide, associate movement director, talks about the use of dancers in OSF’s 2014 production of William Shakespeare’s “The Tempest,” directed by Tony Taccone, artistic director of Berkeley Repertory Theatre.
Read More...Allen Ginsberg’s Short Course on “The Tempest” (1980), Class 2 (of 4)
“Like so many great poets, Allen Ginsberg composed extemporaneously as he spoke, in erudite paragraphs, reciting lines and whole poems from memory—in his case, usually the poems of William Blake.
In the audio lectures here, from August 1980, Ginsberg teaches a four-part course on Shakespeare’s The Tempest (parts one and two above, three and four below), a play he often returned to for reference in his own work.”
Source: Openculture.com
Class two:
Class 3: Allen Ginsberg’s Short Course on The Tempest (1980)
“Like so many great poets, Allen Ginsberg composed extemporaneously as he spoke, in erudite paragraphs, reciting lines and whole poems from memory—in his case, usually the poems of William Blake.
In the audio lectures here, from August 1980, Ginsberg teaches a four-part course on Shakespeare’s The Tempest (parts one and two above, three and four below), a play he often returned to for reference in his own work.”
Source: Openculture.com
Class three:
Allen Ginsberg’s Short Course on “The Tempest” (1980), Class 4 (of 4)
“Like so many great poets, Allen Ginsberg composed extemporaneously as he spoke, in erudite paragraphs, reciting lines and whole poems from memory—in his case, usually the poems of William Blake.
In the audio lectures here, from August 1980, Ginsberg teaches a four-part course on Shakespeare’s The Tempest (parts one and two above, three and four below), a play he often returned to for reference in his own work.”
Source: Openculture.com
Class four:
Allen Ginsberg’s Short Course on “The Tempest” (1980), Class 1 (of 4)
“Like so many great poets, Allen Ginsberg composed extemporaneously as he spoke, in erudite paragraphs, reciting lines and whole poems from memory—in his case, usually the poems of William Blake.
In the audio lectures here, from August 1980, Ginsberg teaches a four-part course on Shakespeare’s The Tempest (parts one and two above, three and four below), a play he often returned to for reference in his own work.”
Source: Openculture.com
Class one: