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Inc. May 15, 2000 Ben Cameron |
Stage Might We asked Ben Cameron, executive director of Theatre Communications Group, about people's changing relationship to live theater in an age of digital entertainment. |
Smithsonian September 2006 Doug Stewart |
To Be or Not to Be Shakespeare While skeptics continue to question the authorship of his plays, a new exhibition raises doubts about the authenticity of his portraits. |
Real Travel Adventures August 2007 B.& B.Neely |
Cedar City, Utah's Best Holiday Location Cedar City is Utah's best holiday location for theater lovers. Why? The summer Shakespearean Festival, where the Tony Award winning repertory company performs nine of the Bard's plays from late June through October. |
AskMen.com Salvatore Mann |
Top 10: Must-See Locales In England One could spend weeks, maybe months, seeing all the spots in England, basking in its history, sinking in its pubs, and eating, well, some great Indian food. Here are 10 places in England that are not to be missed. |
High on Adventure February 2003 Lee Juillerat |
Playing With History in London A City Where the Past is Present: It was an historic day in ways I never anticipated. |
Salon.com March 2, 2002 Gavin McNett |
Mystery man A new documentary revives an old controversy: Was actor and landowner William Shakespeare merely a front man for Christopher Marlowe, the flamboyant gay genius and shadowy Elizabethan spy? |
Smithsonian January 2007 Eric Jaffe |
Recasting Shakespeare's Stage Designing a Globe Theatre for the 21st century: Given only brief guidance and a few months to finish, architects created modern Globes that challenge conventional thoughts about dramatic performances and the spaces that accommodate them. |
Information Today February 3, 2015 |
Adam Matthew Will Digitize Shakespearean Prompt Books The collection is set to be published electronically in fall 2016. |
Smithsonian May 2007 Whitney Dangerfield |
Taking the Stage The National Asian American Theatre Festival makes its debut. |
Lucire June 25, 2009 |
Visiting the Bard's Cobbe Portrait The Cobbe Portrait is on display at the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust. Stanley Moss pays it a visit. |
AskMen.com Brandon Dyce |
3 Days In London London stands, quite possibly, as one of the greatest cities in the world. An international hub with a rich history steeped in grandeur, literature and scandal. |
Chemistry World August 23, 2014 |
The science of Shakespeare: a new look at the playwright's universe Dan Falk's book outlines the scientific climate and developments of Shakespeare's time, and demonstrates the influence of science on the Bard's works. |
Salon.com January 8, 2002 Pam Grossman |
The king of small moments "Big Night" director Campbell Scott chats about "Hamlet," famous parents and his new psychological drama "Final"... |
Salon.com August 7, 2002 Jonathon Keats |
"After Shakespeare" by John Gross, ed. Victor Hugo raised him in a seance, Voltaire ripped him off and Byron called him a vulgar dog. The world's great writers just can't leave Shakespeare alone. |
Salon.com December 8, 1998 Carol Lloyd |
Voice of America Anna Deavere Smith: The shy priestess of performance art has made a career acting out the intimate confessions of others. |
Salon.com June 9, 2000 Charles Taylor |
The player His new musical version of "Love's Labour's Lost" is flawed, but Kenneth Branagh remains our greatest living interpreter of Shakespeare. |
Smithsonian September 2006 Paul Collins |
Folio, Where Art Thou? Given the absence of any original manuscripts in Shakespeare's handwriting, the First Folio is about as close to the Bard as you can get. As long as Folios are misfiled in libraries and hiding with long-lost relatives, the count of 230 copies will inch upward. |