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Re: The Globe Upside Down |
The Shakespeare Conference: SHK 11.1554 Tuesday, 22 August 2000.
[1] From: Paul Nelsen <
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Date: Monday, 21 Aug 2000 11:56:45 -0400
Subj: Re: SHK 11.1548 The Globe Upside Down
[2] From: Steve Urkowitz <
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Date: Monday, 21 Aug 2000 19:05:06 EDT
Subj: Re: The Globe Upside Down and Gerald Freedman
[1]-----------------------------------------------------------------
From: Paul Nelsen <
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Date: Monday, 21 Aug 2000 11:56:45 -0400
Subject: 11.1548 The Globe Upside Down
Comment: Re: SHK 11.1548 The Globe Upside Down
Thanks to Sam Small for his comments on the New Globe's production of
"The Antipodes or The World Upside Down written by Richard Brome, Ben
Jonson's manservant, around 1620." Brome may have served Jonson in 1620,
but he wrote THE ANTIPODES in 1636.
Paul Nelsen
[2]-------------------------------------------------------------
From: Steve Urkowitz <
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Date: Monday, 21 Aug 2000 19:05:06 EDT
Subject: 11.1548 The Globe Upside Down and Gerald Freedman
Comment: Re: SHK 11.1548 The Globe Upside Down and Gerald Freedman
Freedman is one of the great Shakespearean directors. I've seen a Romeo
and Juliet he did at SUNY Purchase a Loves Labors Lost with the Acting
Company and a few others. He's deliciously detailed in the
moment-by-moment vigor of his staging and the intelligence he brings out
in his actors. Ooooh, I wish I could zip to London. Not this year,
Steve Ur-fan-owitz
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