In my opinion, William Shakespeare’s Henry V is the greatest of all his plays and thus worth your consideration. I note this for two reasons. First, because Henry V centers on the Battle of Agincourt, ...
Shakespeare’s roistering Prince Harry, Falstaff’s Hal, is not the man you find here; nothing about the Hundred Years’ War or Agincourt, no “band of brothers,” no “vasty fields of France.” Of course, ...
Plus, get the best of BroadwayWorld delivered to your inbox, and unlimited access to our editorial content across the globe. "Make that good," commands Maria when Feste, the clown in Twefth Night, ...
Henry V’s 1415 victory against the French at Agincourt is a key point of pride in British memory, and as such celebrations for this week’s 600th anniversary are multiple and varied. Options include ...
Henry V is unquestionably the most popular and widely performed of Shakespeare’s historical plays. On occasion, this produces a cheapening side-effect, à la Hamlet, in which certain lines and scenes ...
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