
Shakespeare: The Two Noble Kinsmen
âThis hand shall never more come near thee with such friendship.' How long is forever? When the imprisoned Palamon and Arcite vow eternal friendship, they donât expect that anything will come between them. But then from their cell window they see the beautiful Emilia, and their priorities take a sudden and violent turn. In this late romance, Fletcher and Shakespeare examine love in all its fluid and complex forms. Barrie Rutter, recipient of the 2003 Sam Wanamaker Award, directs his first play since stepping down as Artistic Director of Northern Broadsides. Inspired by the playâs Morris language and references, The Two Noble Kinsmen is set in pastoral âMerrie Englandâ and brought to life with original music composed by acclaimed folk musician Eliza Carthy, and dance choreographed by Ewan Wardrop.
Review
Running at a tight two hours 15 minutes, this tragicomedy still squeezes in a lot of Shakespearean tropes: a tyrant king, a last-minute death, and a young woman driven to madness by love...Barrie Rutterâs direction keeps the play together. Coupled with Jessica Worrallâs design, which leaves the grass-covered stage looking like an enchanted forest and the characters leaping between jewel-toned block colours and fringed dance costumes, the production is both lighthearted and light on its feet, with choreographer Ewan Wardropâs work particularly standing out. Francesca Mills has great comic timing as the jailerâs daughter, as do Paul Stocker and Bryan Dick when they bounce off each other as Palamon and Arcite. (ï»żThe Guardianï»ż)
âThis hand shall never more come near thee with such friendship.' How long is forever? When the imprisoned Palamon and Arcite vow eternal friendship, they donât expect that anything will come between them. But then from their cell window they see the beautiful Emilia, and their priorities take a sudden and violent turn. In this late romance, Fletcher and Shakespeare examine love in all its fluid and complex forms. Barrie Rutter, recipient of the 2003 Sam Wanamaker Award, directs his first play since stepping down as Artistic Director of Northern Broadsides. Inspired by the playâs Morris language and references, The Two Noble Kinsmen is set in pastoral âMerrie Englandâ and brought to life with original music composed by acclaimed folk musician Eliza Carthy, and dance choreographed by Ewan Wardrop.
Review
Running at a tight two hours 15 minutes, this tragicomedy still squeezes in a lot of Shakespearean tropes: a tyrant king, a last-minute death, and a young woman driven to madness by love...Barrie Rutterâs direction keeps the play together. Coupled with Jessica Worrallâs design, which leaves the grass-covered stage looking like an enchanted forest and the characters leaping between jewel-toned block colours and fringed dance costumes, the production is both lighthearted and light on its feet, with choreographer Ewan Wardropâs work particularly standing out. Francesca Mills has great comic timing as the jailerâs daughter, as do Paul Stocker and Bryan Dick when they bounce off each other as Palamon and Arcite. (ï»żThe Guardianï»ż)
Original: $22.99
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$8.05Description
âThis hand shall never more come near thee with such friendship.' How long is forever? When the imprisoned Palamon and Arcite vow eternal friendship, they donât expect that anything will come between them. But then from their cell window they see the beautiful Emilia, and their priorities take a sudden and violent turn. In this late romance, Fletcher and Shakespeare examine love in all its fluid and complex forms. Barrie Rutter, recipient of the 2003 Sam Wanamaker Award, directs his first play since stepping down as Artistic Director of Northern Broadsides. Inspired by the playâs Morris language and references, The Two Noble Kinsmen is set in pastoral âMerrie Englandâ and brought to life with original music composed by acclaimed folk musician Eliza Carthy, and dance choreographed by Ewan Wardrop.
Review
Running at a tight two hours 15 minutes, this tragicomedy still squeezes in a lot of Shakespearean tropes: a tyrant king, a last-minute death, and a young woman driven to madness by love...Barrie Rutterâs direction keeps the play together. Coupled with Jessica Worrallâs design, which leaves the grass-covered stage looking like an enchanted forest and the characters leaping between jewel-toned block colours and fringed dance costumes, the production is both lighthearted and light on its feet, with choreographer Ewan Wardropâs work particularly standing out. Francesca Mills has great comic timing as the jailerâs daughter, as do Paul Stocker and Bryan Dick when they bounce off each other as Palamon and Arcite. (ï»żThe Guardianï»ż)



















