For All Time

Summary In March 1603 Queen Elizabeth I dies with no heir. King James of Scotland, whose mother, Mary Queen of Scots Elizabeth had beheaded, succeeds to the English throne. Shakespeare's company is made to serve the king with theater on Christmas holiday. In 1605, when the Gunpowder Plot is foiled, the king takes a firm and cruel anti-papist stance and it is during this time that Shakespeare writes "MacBeth". The king sees it as seditious and bans any further productions. As Protestantism is forced upon all English subjects through heavy fines, imposed a on Shakespeare's daughter Susanna herself, he next writes and produces "King Lear". After the beginnings of civil uprising of the Diggers of Warwickshire, the day following his attendance of Susanna's marriage to a Puritan doctor, a marriage that will finally bear him a grandchild, Shakespeare returns to London to write and produce "Coriolanus". He and the company open a second theater across the river Thames in London, in the Priory of the Blackfriars. They made more money here in their indoor winter theater than they did at The Globe. They were able to use lighting to set darker moods for their plays like "Cardenio", a music filled rendition of a new translation of "Don Quixote". The Blackfriars' shows raised the social status of actors, the sure sign of their arrival demonstrated in having their portraits painted. The mixing of Shakespeare and his actors with scientists and explorers, may have lead to his discovery of attempts to reach The New World, and inspired his last solo play, "The Tempest". The next year he returns to Warwickshire, buys more land, but rather than retiring, buys a known Catholic safehouse next to Blackfriars. He writes and produces "Henry VIII" at Blackfriars. In 1614 The Globe burns down and Shakespeare divests his shares in there and returns to Warwickshire, bowing out of the theater. He lives a life of leisure, traveling with his son-in-law to London on occasional business trips, generally living the small town life as a pillar of the local church and society. He falls ill in 1616 and dies 23rd April, leaving the bulk of his estate to his daughter Susanna, and some bits to his actors and the marital bed to his wife Anne. Seven years after his death in 1623 actors Heminges and Condell had 37 of his plays printed in a folio, rescuing 16 plays that had never been published and would have been lost forever without their effort to preserve and record his literary legacy, as gesture of their love for their dear friend. This is borne out in the personal tributes that preface the folio.

S1.E4 ∙ For All Time

Directed : Unknown

Written : Unknown

Stars : Ray Fearon Robert Whitelock Michael Wood Gregory Doran

8.3

Details

Genres : History Biography Documentary

Release date : Feb 24, 2004

Countries of origin : United Kingdom

Official sites : BBC MayaVision

Language : English

Filming locations : Blackfriars, London, England, UK

Production companies : Maya Vision International

Summary In March 1603 Queen Elizabeth I dies with no heir. King James of Scotland, whose mother, Mary Queen of Scots Elizabeth had beheaded, succeeds to the English throne. Shakespeare's company is made to serve the king with theater on Christmas holiday. In 1605, when the Gunpowder Plot is foiled, the king takes a firm and cruel anti-papist stance and it is during this time that Shakespeare writes "MacBeth". The king sees it as seditious and bans any further productions. As Protestantism is forced upon all English subjects through heavy fines, imposed a on Shakespeare's daughter Susanna herself, he next writes and produces "King Lear". After the beginnings of civil uprising of the Diggers of Warwickshire, the day following his attendance of Susanna's marriage to a Puritan doctor, a marriage that will finally bear him a grandchild, Shakespeare returns to London to write and produce "Coriolanus". He and the company open a second theater across the river Thames in London, in the Priory of the Blackfriars. They made more money here in their indoor winter theater than they did at The Globe. They were able to use lighting to set darker moods for their plays like "Cardenio", a music filled rendition of a new translation of "Don Quixote". The Blackfriars' shows raised the social status of actors, the sure sign of their arrival demonstrated in having their portraits painted. The mixing of Shakespeare and his actors with scientists and explorers, may have lead to his discovery of attempts to reach The New World, and inspired his last solo play, "The Tempest". The next year he returns to Warwickshire, buys more land, but rather than retiring, buys a known Catholic safehouse next to Blackfriars. He writes and produces "Henry VIII" at Blackfriars. In 1614 The Globe burns down and Shakespeare divests his shares in there and returns to Warwickshire, bowing out of the theater. He lives a life of leisure, traveling with his son-in-law to London on occasional business trips, generally living the small town life as a pillar of the local church and society. He falls ill in 1616 and dies 23rd April, leaving the bulk of his estate to his daughter Susanna, and some bits to his actors and the marital bed to his wife Anne. Seven years after his death in 1623 actors Heminges and Condell had 37 of his plays printed in a folio, rescuing 16 plays that had never been published and would have been lost forever without their effort to preserve and record his literary legacy, as gesture of their love for their dear friend. This is borne out in the personal tributes that preface the folio.

Details

Genres : History Biography Documentary

Release date : Feb 24, 2004

Countries of origin : United Kingdom

Official sites : BBC MayaVision

Language : English

Filming locations : Blackfriars, London, England, UK

Production companies : Maya Vision International

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Henry Dunant: Red on the Cross

Henry Dunant: Red on the Cross

Henry Dunant, son of a Geneva francophone upper class bourgeoisie family, works for a Swiss exploitation company in French Algeria; when the colonists are thirsty, he returns determined to convince the firm and emperor Napoleon III to build a dam for them. After his Uncle, Dr. Hubert Dunant, diagnoses him not with Algerian typhus, just malaria, also his first meeting -dropping drawers in hospital for a shot- with nurse Cécile Thuillier, and meeting his careerist brother Daniel's fiancée, Léonie Bourg-Thibourg, daughter of the firm's boss, the board approves his plan. On his way to the emperor, who didn't even concede to receive him, Henry gets stuck in Castiglione, part of the Austrian province Lombardy which French troops came to 'liberate'; his Geneva friend Dr. Louis Appia saves his life by presenting him to suspicious Austrian troops as his medical assistant, and he soon gets passionate about senseless cruelties of war while helping out with what he learned from grandpa. Cécile, part of a godsend shipment of Swis staff and supplies, becomes his right hand and true love. After French troops take the village and reinstate senseless abuses, his letters home, published in Geneva by family friend journalist Samuel Lowenthal, whose newspaper gets attacked too, the unprecedented shocking first-hand truth about war cruelty, start enough public commotion to make his plans eventual turn true in the form of the now worldwide indispensable, strictly neutral humanitarian last resort for all in need, the International Red Cross, named after the symbol Dunant devised by painting in blood the Christian symbol French and Austrians had in common as Catholic nations to safely evacuate from Castiglione.

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