STREAMED SHAKESPEARE has visited a magical island off the Milanese coast, explored ancient Greece and met a bear in Bohemia s forests. One might be forgiven for thinking that there is nowhere for them to go (boldly!)… except for maybe, up?
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WHO: Austin Shakespeare WHAT:Staged Reading of Shakespeares Henry IV, Parts 1 & 2WHEN:Live: Part 1 Sat., March 27, 2021 at 7 p.m.; Part 2 Sun., March 28, at 5 p.m.; Recorded: Part 1 Fri., April 2, at 7 p.m.; Part 2 Sat., April 3, at 7 p.m.WHERE:Online via Zoom TICKETS:One show $15 two shows $25 on EventbriteAustin, TX Austin Shakespeare is bringing The Bards two interlinking masterworks to the Zoom screen with a staged reading of Henry IV, Parts 1 & 2 live on March 27 & 28 with a recorded version available April 2 & 3. Tickets, which are $15 for one show and $25 for two shows, are on Eventbrite. These two Henry IV plays are as compelling as Macbeth or Hamlet. After doing 24 online events over the past year, weve learned to use the staging devices of Zoom, said Austin Shakespeare Artistic Director Ann Ciccolella. Our talented cast is looking forward to using our creativity to bring this dramatic story of power, honor and rebellion to the screen. Newly crowned Henry IV struggles to kee
Country Life
Trending: Fergus Granville grins after collecting some new material. Credit: Glyn Satterley for Country Life
Fashioned from driftwood, barbed wire, sea urchins and barnacle-encrusted plastic mannequins, Earl Granville’s eclectic sculptures are inspired by the Hebridean island of North Uist’s wild weather and terrain, discovers David Profumo. Photographs by Glyn Satterley for Country Life.
It’s a dreich October morning on the east coast of the island, the Hebridean sea temperature is 13˚C and a man of 60 clad in a wetsuit is cutting loose some female busts he’s tethered underwater for two years. They’re constellated in barnacles and covered in grape-like ascidians (sea squirts) and he grimaces with cold and triumph, for these mannequins are destined for his studio meet Fergus, 6th Earl Granville, laird of North Uist, godson of The Queen, who’s rapidly becoming a sculptor of rising repute.