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  1. Following 2021’s Romeo & Juliet (★★★★ ‘bold, clever, energetic’, The Guardian) in the Globe Theatre, Director Ola Ince debuts in the Sam Wanamaker Playhouse with Shakespeare’s confronting look at the destructive impact of institutional racism, toxic masculinity, and a justice system locked in a vicious cycle of self-fulfilling prophecy.

  2. One of Shakespeare’s greatest imaginative achievements. This first production of OTHELLO at Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre was a triumph. “Full of pace and energy…. Eamonn Walker brings to Othello dignity, grace and a fine sense of the contradiction that leads Othello to lament “the pity of it” even as he prepares to murder Desdemona ...

  3. 12.00pm Welcome with Dr Hanh Bui, Teaching and Research Fellow (Shakespeare’s Globe) 12.15–1.15pm Session 1: ‘Othello and the Performance of Race’ with Dr Paul Prescott, Honorary Professorial Fellow at the Centre for the Study of the Renaissance (University of Warwick). Novelist Ben Okri once observed that ‘if Othello did not begin as ...

  4. 31 de ene. de 2024 · But this is inspired revisionism by Ince, who brazenly turned Romeo and Juliet into a violent comedy, of sorts, with signs about knife crime, also at the Globe theatre. Othello (Ken Nwosu) is ...

  5. Shakespeare’s Globe announces the cast of Othello, directed by Ola Ince ( Romeo and Juliet, Globe). The cast comprises Charlotte Bate, Ralph Davis, Poppy Gilbert, Oli Higginson, David Hounslow, Maggie Musgrove, Ken Nwosu, Ira Mandela Siobhan, Sam Swann and Ché Walker. Director Ola Ince says: “It’s so exciting to bring Othello into the ...

  6. This Othello doesn't fully work, as neither of the leads' characters have as much depth and roundness as one might wish to see. It should however fill the Globe on the back of a well-known title and a couple of stars with high-profile screen credentials. Theatre review of Othello (William Shakespeare) at Shakespeare's Globe - reviewer: Philip ...

  7. In Shakespeare's time, women did not enjoy the same freedoms that they do today. This was a time of strict social hierarchies and stringent rules about how women should behave in the home and in public. Because women were responsible for maintaining the 'honour' of their families (particularly amongst the upper classes), there was a great deal of anxiety about how they behaved in public and in ...