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First rehearsal images show Ncuti Gatwa as Christopher Marlowe and Edward Bluemel as William Shakespeare in RSC's "Born With ...
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PinkNews on MSNFirst look at Ncuti Gatwa in queer Shakespeare play Born With TeethNcuti Gatwa is swapping out the Tardis for the West End in the play Born With Teeth, which imagines a queer relationship ...
Liz Duffy Adams's West End play sees Ncuti Gatwa and Edward Bluemel star as the famous playwriting rivals – and possible collaborators. Read more on LondonTheatre.co.uk.
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The Bolton News on MSNRoyal Shakespeare Company bringing Matilda the Musical to ManchesterMatilda the Musical is set to visit Manchester next year. The Royal Shakespeare Company’s production will be coming to the ...
The Royal Shakespeare Company is working on its first-ever video game, an adaptation of Macbeth - but it doesn't play out as you'd expect. The game, a collaboration with developer iNK Stories,is ...
What’s past may be prologue, but the latest production of The Tempest by The Royal Shakespeare Company is nothing short of the future. The RSC, in partnership with Intel and The Imaginarium ...
The Royal Shakespeare Company is at the start of its 5G journey. In 2022, Ellis and her colleagues collaborated with Ericsson, a Swedish telecommunications company, to experiment with its 5G lab.
Everyone knows the melancholy Dane. But if you see things from his point of view, Hamlet offers some useful tips for getting ...
The Royal Shakespeare Company's upcoming tour to Ann Arbor is completely different. It's not just bringing three plays by William of Avon to a Midwestern college town. As Deborah Shaw, the director of ...
The Royal Shakespeare Company plans to produce ALL of the bard's works in the next year. Deborah Shaw, director of the upcoming festival in Stratford, England, tells Scott Simon what's coming.
The gloomy prince in black is back, but the Royal Shakespeare Company’s “Hamlet” at the Kennedy Center is most vibrant when the title character goes rogue and styles himself as an outsider ...
NEW YORK — Bill this midsummer card as an Elizabethan throwdown: the Royal Shakespeare Company versus the New York Shakespeare Festival. Virtually within earshot of each other, Britain's bastion ...
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