IIs this the literary find of the year? The decade? The century? By good fortune the author has unearthed Shakespeare’s long lost play Henry VII. So, in the words of the Prologue Gentles, one and all, you are invited To hear our play, no longer now benighted. All the well-known characters are present – Henry’s mother, Margaret Beaufort, his wife, Elizabeth of York, his sons Arthur and Henry and Arthur’s wife Katherine of Aragon. Even Katherine’s sister Juana the Mad makes an appearance. Henry VIII makes a triumphant entry in the final scene. And don’t let’s forget the villains – Perkin Warbeck, Lambert Simnel, William Stanley, Edmund Dudley and Richard Empson. In the Shakespearean tradition a Fool and a monkey lighten the action. Did Elizabeth really think that Perkin Warbeck could be her brother Richard? What happened on Katherine of Aragon’s wedding night? The play tackles these and other much debated historical puzzles. So what accounts for its neglect for over four hundred years? As it says in the Epilogue But of our play’s neglect I cannot tell. Some say ‘twas doubtful of the Tudor claim, Some say ‘twas sympathetic to the Boar, Some say ‘twas lost and quite forgot withal, I say, perhaps, ‘twas never writ at all.
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Is this the literary find of the year? The decade? The century? By great good fortune, after years of searching, author David Collard has at last unearthed William Shakespeare's long-lost play Henry VII and presents it here for your enjoyment. Where has the play been for centuries? Or was it perhaps, never written at all...?
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781913297091
Publisert
2020-09-29
Utgiver
Vendor
Saron Publishing
Vekt
200 gr
Høyde
216 mm
Bredde
139 mm
Dybde
8 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
84

Forfatter

Biographical note

David Collard is a Professor Emeritus of Economics, having retired from the University of Bath. He has written extensively on economics, including the books Altruism and Economy (1978) and Generations of Economists (2011). Recently he was an editor of A Companion to Alfred Russel Wallace (2019). He became interested in theatre after organising a large and successful Son et Lumiere at Usk Castle to mark the 600th anniversary of the Battle of Usk in 2006. The present play was written in 2016 and has had two 'rehearsed readings', one at a local village pub and one at the 2017 Bristol Fringe Shakespeare Festival. It has not yet (as at May 2020) had a full staging. He has also written a few shorter plays including The Last Will and Testament of Roger Edwards, Gentleman and Trelawny versus Shelley. David and his wife Stella have a smallholding in Monmouthshire.