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Play:-- All plays -- All’s Well That Ends Well Antony and Cleopatra As You Like It Comedy of Errors, The Coriolanus Cymbeline Hamlet Henry IV Part 1 Henry IV Part 2 Henry V Henry VI part 1 Henry VI part 2 Henry VI part 3 Henry VIII Julius Caesar King John King Lear Love’s Labour’s Lost Macbeth Measure for Measure Merchant of Venice, The Merry Wives of Windsor, The Midsummer Night’s Dream, A Much Ado About Nothing Othello Pericles, Prince of Tyre Richard II Richard III Romeo and Juliet Taming of the Shrew, The Tempest, The Timon of Athens Titus Andronicus Troilus and Cressida Twelfth Night Two Gentlemen of Verona, The Two Noble Kinsmen, The Winter’s Tale, The
Radio adaptation of the play broadcast in two parts. Produced by Peter Watts, with Laurence Payne and Belle Chrystall in the title roles.
Radio play written by Joe Burroughs about the English actor Edmund Kean (1787-1833). Kean systematically studied the principal Shakespearean characters, displaying the peculiar originality of his genius by...
Radio portrait of English actor and theatrical manager David Garrick (1717-1779) written by Walter Allen. Garrick played seventeen Shakespearian parts and tried his hand at several adaptations of...
Radio adaptation of Richard III by James and Elizabeth Hart with Laurence Olivier as Richard and Ralph Richardson as Buckingham.
Frank Black leads the Frank Black Orchestra in incidental music from Shakespeare.
Radio adaptation of Coriolanus directed by Forrest Barnes.
Radio comedy series written by and starring Fred Allen. Maurice Evans and Allen joke about the misfit between lowbrow radio and highbrow culture (Shakespeare). Evans performs an extract from the ghost scene...
Radio broadcast of King Lear adapted and directed by Orson Welles. The announcer is John Brown. Welles is in every scene and includes all Lears’s big speeches, some of which are incorporated into one long...
Radio broadcast described as a comedy of ‘loose and light interviews with a lunatic, a lover and a poet, based on Shakespeare’s theme’.
Television drama about an imaginary adventure between William Shakespeare and Queen Elizabeth. It was originally written in 1910 by George Bernard Shaw in aid of the scheme for a National Theatre.