WORLD PREMIERES AT THE SHAKESPEARE'S GLOBE
By TREMAYNE MillerSHAKESPEARE GLOBE PRESS RELEASE – 15 February 2010
WORLD PREMIERES
Published by: Tremayne
Shakespeare’s Globe and its 2010 theatre season host two world premieres, Howard Brenton’s new play – Anne Boleyn and Bedlam by first female playwright at the Globe, Nell Leyshon.
“…for years I’d wanted to write a tale about The Tudors. …sex and religion at such a high level…”
(Howard Brenton).
Anne Boleyn is a dramatisation on aspects of her life and the legacy of her husband, Henry VIII,to whom she was second wife . A sexually charged woman who took it upon herself to improve the state religion was in, and for the better.
“…anything Tudor-related is gold dust to us at the moment, think to T.V. adaptations…”
(Dominic Dromgoole – Globe Artistic Director).
Nell Leyshon’s writing is described by Dominic Dromgoole as ‘a still and beautiful incapsulation of that Somerset life that’s passing’. Her new play Bedlam is a fictional take on a London hospital for the mentally insane and looks at the common link between art and insanity.
“…mental illness wasn’t understood, you were either high or low.”
(Nell Leyshon).
SHAKESPEARE’S GLOBE 2010 THEATRE DIARY:
Macbeth by William Shakespeare
23 April – 27 June
Directed by Lucy Bailey
Henry VIII by William Shakespeare
15 May – 21 August
Directed by Mark Rosenblatt
Henry IV Parts 1 and 2 by William Shakespeare
Part 1: 6 June – 2 October
Part 2: 3 July - 3 October
Directed by Dominic Dromgoole
WORLD PREMIERE
Anne Boleyn by Howard Brenton
24 July – 21 August
Directed by John Dove
The Merry Wives of Windsor by William Shakespeare
14 August – 2 October
Directed by Christopher Luscombe
WORLD PREMIERE
Bedlam by Nell Leyshan
5 September – 1 October
Directed by Jessica Swale
Tickets are available through the box office:
020 7901 9919/020 7087 7398 or
Online: www.shakespeares-globe.org
Q&A SESSION
• The development of The Winter Theatre
“…we retain a shell. We’ve built up an understanding of The Blackfriars, the indoor theatre in Shakespeare’s day, combined with some of our own designs…”
(Dominic Dromgoole)
•Writing for the Globe
“The Globe loves storytelling. Being an experimental theatre, it is a psychological window where audience’s brains can open up”.
(Howard Brenton)
•Ticket prices
The Globe continue to sell stand-up tickets for just £5.
“We’ve got the most democratic mix of audience. I doubt we’ll ever reach the equivalent to New York where a free theatre pass has been made available.
(Howard Brenton)
•Nell Leyshon – First Female Globe playwright
“I wanted to improve the complexity found within plays, which resulted in me writing harder. For a penny, on a Sunday, during the 18th century you could observe the mentally ill and poke them with a stick. I didn’t want to write an historical account. I wanted to have some fun and not be held by history”.
• Themes of the world premiere plays: religious turmoil from Howard Brenton vs. binge-dinking by Nell Leyshon:
“I’m very interested in religious conflicts. You don’t set out to write a play with addressing the nation though. Otherwise you’d go mad like Sir Bernard Shaw!”
(Howard Brenton)
“You couldn’t go to a West End Theatre for fear of being stabbed”, Nell Leyshon who makes a comparison between theatre back in the 18th century and now.
•Sum-up by Artistic Director, Dominic Dromgoole
“The extraordinary story of the Globe goes on. It’s little short of a miracle that it’s becoming reachable on your laptop from the top of The Himalayan Mountains”.


