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  • Street art of William Shakespeare on the South Bank in London, England, United Kingdom.
    20190427_shakespeare_001.jpg
  • The Reclaim Shakespeare Company did four performances in the court yard of the British Museum supported by a large flash-mob  audience. The company is made up of activists who wants The Royal Shakespeare company stop accepting sponsorship from the oil company BP. BP also sponsor the Tate museums and the British Museum. The flashmob was organised by the anti-oil activist groups The Reclaim Shakespeare Company,<br />
Rising Tide, Liberate Tate, the UK Tar Sands Network and Art Not Oil. The Royal Shakespeare Company has publicly announced they will stop their partnership with BP and the performance was therefor the last by the Reclaim the Shakespeare Company activists after a long run of successful interventions.
    IMG_6805_1_1.jpg
  • The Reclaim Shakespeare Company did four performances in the court yard of the British Museum supported by a large flash-mob  audience. The company is made up of activists who wants The Royal Shakespeare company stop accepting sponsorship from the oil company BP. BP also sponsor the Tate museums and the British Museum. The flashmob was organised by the anti-oil activist groups The Reclaim Shakespeare Company,<br />
Rising Tide, Liberate Tate, the UK Tar Sands Network and Art Not Oil. The Royal Shakespeare Company has publicly announced they will stop their partnership with BP and the performance was therefor the last by the Reclaim the Shakespeare Company activists after a long run of successful interventions.
    IMG_6756_1.jpg
  • The Reclaim Shakespeare Company did four performances in the court yard of the British Museum supported by a large flash-mob  audience. The company is made up of activists who wants The Royal Shakespeare company stop accepting sponsorship from the oil company BP. BP also sponsor the Tate museums and the British Museum. The flashmob was organised by the anti-oil activist groups The Reclaim Shakespeare Company,<br />
Rising Tide, Liberate Tate, the UK Tar Sands Network and Art Not Oil. The Royal Shakespeare Company has publicly announced they will stop their partnership with BP and the performance was therefor the last by the Reclaim the Shakespeare Company activists after a long run of successful interventions.
    IMG_6742_1.jpg
  • The Reclaim Shakespeare Company did four performances in the court yard of the British Museum supported by a large flash-mob  audience. The company is made up of activists who wants The Royal Shakespeare company stop accepting sponsorship from the oil company BP. BP also sponsor the Tate museums and the British Museum. The flashmob was organised by the anti-oil activist groups The Reclaim Shakespeare Company,<br />
Rising Tide, Liberate Tate, the UK Tar Sands Network and Art Not Oil. The Royal Shakespeare Company has publicly announced they will stop their partnership with BP and the performance was therefor the last by the Reclaim the Shakespeare Company activists after a long run of successful interventions.
    IMG_6821_1.jpg
  • The Reclaim Shakespeare Company did four performances in the court yard of the British Museum supported by a large flash-mob  audience. The company is made up of activists who wants The Royal Shakespeare company stop accepting sponsorship from the oil company BP. BP also sponsor the Tate museums and the British Museum. The flashmob was organised by the anti-oil activist groups The Reclaim Shakespeare Company,<br />
Rising Tide, Liberate Tate, the UK Tar Sands Network and Art Not Oil. The Royal Shakespeare Company has publicly announced they will stop their partnership with BP and the performance was therefor the last by the Reclaim the Shakespeare Company activists after a long run of successful interventions.
    IMG_6775_1.jpg
  • The Reclaim Shakespeare Company did four performances in the court yard of the British Museum supported by a large flash-mob  audience. The company is made up of activists who wants The Royal Shakespeare company stop accepting sponsorship from the oil company BP. BP also sponsor the Tate museums and the British Museum. The flashmob was organised by the anti-oil activist groups The Reclaim Shakespeare Company,<br />
Rising Tide, Liberate Tate, the UK Tar Sands Network and Art Not Oil. The Royal Shakespeare Company has publicly announced they will stop their partnership with BP and the performance was therefor the last by the Reclaim the Shakespeare Company activists after a long run of successful interventions.
    IMG_6751_1.jpg
  • The Reclaim Shakespeare Company did four performances in the court yard of the British Museum supported by a large flash-mob  audience. The company is made up of activists who wants The Royal Shakespeare company stop accepting sponsorship from the oil company BP. BP also sponsor the Tate museums and the British Museum. The flashmob was organised by the anti-oil activist groups The Reclaim Shakespeare Company,<br />
Rising Tide, Liberate Tate, the UK Tar Sands Network and Art Not Oil. The Royal Shakespeare Company has publicly announced they will stop their partnership with BP and the performance was therefor the last by the Reclaim the Shakespeare Company activists after a long run of successful interventions.
    IMG_6693_1.jpg
  • The Reclaim Shakespeare Company did four performances in the court yard of the British Museum supported by a large flash-mob  audience. The company is made up of activists who wants The Royal Shakespeare company stop accepting sponsorship from the oil company BP. BP also sponsor the Tate museums and the British Museum. The flashmob was organised by the anti-oil activist groups The Reclaim Shakespeare Company,<br />
Rising Tide, Liberate Tate, the UK Tar Sands Network and Art Not Oil. The Royal Shakespeare Company has publicly announced they will stop their partnership with BP and the performance was therefor the last by the Reclaim the Shakespeare Company activists after a long run of successful interventions.
    IMG_6617_1.jpg
  • The Reclaim Shakespeare Company did four performances in the court yard of the British Museum supported by a large flash-mob  audience. The company is made up of activists who wants The Royal Shakespeare company stop accepting sponsorship from the oil company BP. BP also sponsor the Tate museums and the British Museum. The flashmob was organised by the anti-oil activist groups The Reclaim Shakespeare Company,<br />
Rising Tide, Liberate Tate, the UK Tar Sands Network and Art Not Oil. The Royal Shakespeare Company has publicly announced they will stop their partnership with BP and the performance was therefor the last by the Reclaim the Shakespeare Company activists after a long run of successful interventions.
    IMG_6601_1.jpg
  • The Reclaim Shakespeare Company did four performances in the court yard of the British Museum supported by a large flash-mob  audience. The company is made up of activists who wants The Royal Shakespeare company stop accepting sponsorship from the oil company BP. BP also sponsor the Tate museums and the British Museum. The flashmob was organised by the anti-oil activist groups The Reclaim Shakespeare Company,<br />
Rising Tide, Liberate Tate, the UK Tar Sands Network and Art Not Oil. The Royal Shakespeare Company has publicly announced they will stop their partnership with BP and the performance was therefor the last by the Reclaim the Shakespeare Company activists after a long run of successful interventions.
    IMG_6574_1.jpg
  • The Reclaim Shakespeare Company did four performances in the court yard of the British Museum supported by a large flash-mob  audience. The company is made up of activists who wants The Royal Shakespeare company stop accepting sponsorship from the oil company BP. BP also sponsor the Tate museums and the British Museum. The flashmob was organised by the anti-oil activist groups The Reclaim Shakespeare Company,<br />
Rising Tide, Liberate Tate, the UK Tar Sands Network and Art Not Oil. The Royal Shakespeare Company has publicly announced they will stop their partnership with BP and the performance was therefor the last by the Reclaim the Shakespeare Company activists after a long run of successful interventions.
    IMG_6559_1.jpg
  • The Reclaim Shakespeare Company did four performances in the court yard of the British Museum supported by a large flash-mob  audience. The company is made up of activists who wants The Royal Shakespeare company stop accepting sponsorship from the oil company BP. BP also sponsor the Tate museums and the British Museum. The flashmob was organised by the anti-oil activist groups The Reclaim Shakespeare Company,<br />
Rising Tide, Liberate Tate, the UK Tar Sands Network and Art Not Oil. The Royal Shakespeare Company has publicly announced they will stop their partnership with BP and the performance was therefor the last by the Reclaim the Shakespeare Company activists after a long run of successful interventions.
    IMG_6564_1_1.jpg
  • The Reclaim Shakespeare Company did four performances in the court yard of the British Museum supported by a large flash-mob  audience. The company is made up of activists who wants The Royal Shakespeare company stop accepting sponsorship from the oil company BP. BP also sponsor the Tate museums and the British Museum. The flashmob was organised by the anti-oil activist groups The Reclaim Shakespeare Company,<br />
Rising Tide, Liberate Tate, the UK Tar Sands Network and Art Not Oil. The Royal Shakespeare Company has publicly announced they will stop their partnership with BP and the performance was therefor the last by the Reclaim the Shakespeare Company activists after a long run of successful interventions.
    IMG_6525_1_1.jpg
  • Shakespeare's Globe Theatre on the Southbank. This restored and working theatre in the round is ont eh original site where Shakespeare plays were performed in the 1600's.
    _MG_3576.jpg
  • Shakespeare's Globe Theatre on the Southbank. This restored and working theatre in the round is ont eh original site where Shakespeare plays were performed in the 1600's.
    _MG_3575.jpg
  • Shakespeare's Globe Theatre on the Southbank. This restored and working theatre in the round is ont eh original site where Shakespeare plays were performed in the 1600's.
    _MG_3574.jpg
  • The birthplace of William Shakespeare in Stratford upon Avon, a small market town in the county of Warwickshire in central England. The town is a popular tourist destination owing to its status as birthplace of the playwright and poet William Shakespeare, receiving about three million visitors a year from all over the world.
    20100602stratford upon avonM.jpg
  • Tudor building The Shakespeare Hostelrie in Stratford upon Avon, a small market town in the county of Warwickshire in central England. The Tudor architectural style is the final development of medieval architecture during the Tudor period (1485–1603). The town is a popular tourist destination owing to its status as birthplace of the playwright and poet William Shakespeare, receiving about three million visitors a year from all over the world.
    20100602stratford upon avonH.jpg
  • The birthplace of William Shakespeare in Stratford upon Avon, a small market town in the county of Warwickshire in central England. The town is a popular tourist destination owing to its status as birthplace of the playwright and poet William Shakespeare, receiving about three million visitors a year from all over the world.
    20100602stratford upon avonN.jpg
  • Tudor building now a hotel, The Shakespeare in Stratford upon Avon, a small market town in the county of Warwickshire in central England. The Tudor architectural style is the final development of medieval architecture during the Tudor period (1485–1603). The town is a popular tourist destination owing to its status as birthplace of the playwright and poet William Shakespeare, receiving about three million visitors a year from all over the world.
    20100602stratford upon avonJ.jpg
  • The Great Garden of New Place. Much of this site formed the garden and orchard of William Shakespeare's house, New Place, where he lived from 1597 until his death in 1616. Stratford upon Avon, a small market town in the county of Warwickshire in central England. The town is a popular tourist destination owing to its status as birthplace of the playwright and poet William Shakespeare, receiving about three million visitors a year from all over the world.
    20100602stratford upon avonG.jpg
  • The Great Garden of New Place. Much of this site formed the garden and orchard of William Shakespeare's house, New Place, where he lived from 1597 until his death in 1616. Stratford upon Avon, a small market town in the county of Warwickshire in central England. The town is a popular tourist destination owing to its status as birthplace of the playwright and poet William Shakespeare, receiving about three million visitors a year from all over the world.
    20100602stratford upon avonF.jpg
  • Statue of William Shakespeare and in the foreground, Hamlet in the main park in Stratford upon Avon, a small market town in the county of Warwickshire in central England. The town is a popular tourist destination owing to its status as birthplace of the playwright and poet William Shakespeare, receiving about three million visitors a year from all over the world.
    20100602stratford upon avonD.jpg
  • Statue of William Shakespeare in the main park in Stratford upon Avon, a small market town in the county of Warwickshire in central England. The town is a popular tourist destination owing to its status as birthplace of the playwright and poet William Shakespeare, receiving about three million visitors a year from all over the world.
    20100602stratford upon avonC.jpg
  • Statue of William Shakespeare in the main park in Stratford upon Avon, a small market town in the county of Warwickshire in central England. The town is a popular tourist destination owing to its status as birthplace of the playwright and poet William Shakespeare, receiving about three million visitors a year from all over the world.
    20100602stratford upon avonB.jpg
  • Statue of William Shakespeare in the main park in Stratford upon Avon, a small market town in the county of Warwickshire in central England. The town is a popular tourist destination owing to its status as birthplace of the playwright and poet William Shakespeare, receiving about three million visitors a year from all over the world.
    20100602stratford upon avonA.jpg
  • Tudor building The Shakespeare Hostelrie in Stratford upon Avon, a small market town in the county of Warwickshire in central England. The Tudor architectural style is the final development of medieval architecture during the Tudor period (1485–1603). The town is a popular tourist destination owing to its status as birthplace of the playwright and poet William Shakespeare, receiving about three million visitors a year from all over the world.
    20100602stratford upon avonI.jpg
  • British writer Nicholas Shakespeare in London. Nicholas William Richmond Shakespeare (born 3 March 1957 in Worcester, England) is a British novelist and biographer.
    Nicholas Shakespere.jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • London, UK. Sunday 18th November 2012. Reclaim Shakespeare Company flashmob demonstrating in the British Museum’s Great Court against BP's (British Petroleum) sponsorship of the arts. Oil giant BP has a long-running financial relationship with the British Museum. The museum’s current ‘Shakespeare: Staging the World’ exhibition is sponsored by BP.  Despite the company’s decision to go into the ‘world’s most destructive project’ – the Tar Sands, the devastating Deepwater Horizon spill, and its eyeing-up of the vulnerable Arctic.
    20121118anti bp flashmob british mus...jpg
  • The Pen and Parchment pub in Stratford upon Avon, a small market town in the county of Warwickshire in central England. The town is a popular tourist destination owing to its status as birthplace of the playwright and poet William Shakespeare, receiving about three million visitors a year from all over the world.
    20100602stratford upon avonS.jpg
  • Tourists in Stratford upon Avon, a small market town in the county of Warwickshire in central England. The town is a popular tourist destination owing to its status as birthplace of the playwright and poet William Shakespeare, receiving about three million visitors a year from all over the world.
    20100602stratford upon avonR.jpg
  • Stratford upon Avon, a small market town in the county of Warwickshire in central England. The town is a popular tourist destination owing to its status as birthplace of the playwright and poet William Shakespeare, receiving about three million visitors a year from all over the world.
    20100602stratford upon avonP.jpg
  • Tourists in Stratford upon Avon, a small market town in the county of Warwickshire in central England. The town is a popular tourist destination owing to its status as birthplace of the playwright and poet William Shakespeare, receiving about three million visitors a year from all over the world.
    20100602stratford upon avonO.jpg
  • Tudor building The Garrick Inn in Stratford upon Avon, a small market town in the county of Warwickshire in central England. The Tudor architectural style is the final development of medieval architecture during the Tudor period (1485–1603). The town is a popular tourist destination owing to its status as birthplace of the playwright and poet William Shakespeare, receiving about three million visitors a year from all over the world.
    20100602stratford upon avonL.jpg
  • Stone building in Stratford upon Avon, a small market town in the county of Warwickshire in central England. An old patriotic sign can still be read inscribed 'God Save The King'. The town is a popular tourist destination owing to its status as birthplace of the playwright and poet William Shakespeare, receiving about three million visitors a year from all over the world.
    20100602stratford upon avonK.jpg
  • The Pen and Parchment pub in Stratford upon Avon, a small market town in the county of Warwickshire in central England. The town is a popular tourist destination owing to its status as birthplace of the playwright and poet William Shakespeare, receiving about three million visitors a year from all over the world.
    20100602stratford upon avonT.jpg
  • Tourists in Stratford upon Avon, a small market town in the county of Warwickshire in central England. The town is a popular tourist destination owing to its status as birthplace of the playwright and poet William Shakespeare, receiving about three million visitors a year from all over the world.
    20100602stratford upon avonQ.jpg
  • Fountain in Bancroft Gardens, Stratford upon Avon, a small market town in the county of Warwickshire in central England. The town is a popular tourist destination owing to its status as birthplace of the playwright and poet William Shakespeare, receiving about three million visitors a year from all over the world.
    20100602stratford upon avonE.jpg
  • Peter Hall. Theatre Director, founder of The Royal Shakespeare Company and The National Theatre. (22 Nov 1930 - 11 Sept 20-17).
    PeterHall_001.jpg
  • A dress rehearsal performance of Hamlet directed by Adrian Noble and starring English actor, Kenneth Branagh on 1st November 1992 at the Royal Shakespeare Company, London UK. This was the fourth time that Kenneth Branagh had played Hamlet, and he would go on to play the role again for his film version in 1997. Sir Kenneth Charles Branagh b1960 is a Northern Irish actor, director, producer, and screenwriter originally from Belfast who was raised in England.
    kenneth_branagh01-01-11-1992.jpg
  • London's Theatre Royal in the capital's Haymarket, currently showing Shakespeare's The Tempest starring Ralph Fiennes. The Theatre Royal Haymarket (also known as Haymarket Theatre or the Little Theatre) is a West End theatre in the Haymarket in the City of Westminster that dates back to 1720, making it the third-oldest London playhouse still in use. Samuel Foote acquired the lease in 1747, and in 1766 he gained a royal patent to play legitimate drama (meaning spoken drama, as opposed to opera, concerts or plays with music) in the summer months. The original building was a little further north in the same street. It has been at its current location since 1821, when John Nash redesigned it. It is a Grade I listed building, with a seating capacity of 888.
    theatre_royal2-23-09-2011_1_1.jpg
  • A dress rehearsal performance of Hamlet directed by Adrian Noble and starring English actor, Kenneth Branagh on 1st November 1992 at the Royal Shakespeare Company, London UK. This was the fourth time that Kenneth Branagh had played Hamlet, and he would go on to play the role again for his film version in 1997. Sir Kenneth Charles Branagh b1960 is a Northern Irish actor, director, producer, and screenwriter originally from Belfast who was raised in England.
    kenneth_branagh02-01-11-1992.jpg
  • With a dark background as black as his jacket, a wide-eyed young Shakespearean Kenneth Branagh reaches up theatrically to make a dramatic point during his acting role as Hamlet in the Royal Shakespeare Company's (RSC) production that took the biggest advance in its 32-year history – £1.3m, which opened at the Barbican Centre in London last weekend then transferred to Stratford upon Avon in the spring. Branagh received largely favourable reviews for his performance in the title role in Adrian Noble's production.
    kenneth_branagh-15-11-1992.jpg
  • A young Egyptian boy throws his ball up in the air while playing football near a Shakepearean quote, written on the wall of a house in the village of Bairat on the West Bank of Luxor, Nile Valley, Egypt.
    egypt203-03-03-2016_1.jpg
  • The Western Heights of Dover fortification in the morning sunlight stands at the top of the West Cliffs, with residential buildings of Aycliffe below with Shakespeare beach at the bottom.
    UK-Kent-CoastLine-0215.jpg
  • The Palazzo Contarini del Bovol aka 'the secret staircase', a small palace in Venice, Italy, best known for the external spiral staircase, with a plethora of arches, known as the Scala Contarini del Bovolo (of the snail). The palace is located in a less-traveled side-street near the Campo Manin, near the Rialto. Palazzo del Bovolo was chosen by Orson Welles as one of the main filming locations (Brabantio's house) for his 1952 screen adaptation of Shakespeare's Othello
    venice_100-23-07-2015_1.jpg
  • London's Theatre Royal in the capital's Haymarket, currently showing Shakespeare's The Tempest starring Ralph Fiennes. The Theatre Royal Haymarket (also known as Haymarket Theatre or the Little Theatre) is a West End theatre in the Haymarket in the City of Westminster that dates back to 1720, making it the third-oldest London playhouse still in use. Samuel Foote acquired the lease in 1747, and in 1766 he gained a royal patent to play legitimate drama (meaning spoken drama, as opposed to opera, concerts or plays with music) in the summer months. The original building was a little further north in the same street. It has been at its current location since 1821, when John Nash redesigned it. It is a Grade I listed building, with a seating capacity of 888.
    theatre_royal5-23-09-2011_1_1.jpg
  • As the UK governments lockdown restrictions during the Coronavirus pandemic continues, and number of UK reported cases rose to 138,078 with a total now of 18,738 deaths, Leadenhall Market is seen deserted and closed up on St. Georges Day when the bars and pubs would normally be thriving on Englands patron saints day plus Shakespeares birth and death day, in the City of London, the capitals financial district, on 23rd April 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_lockdown-18-23-04-2020_1.jpg
  • As the UK governments lockdown restrictions during the Coronavirus pandemic continues, and number of UK reported cases rose to 138,078 with a total now of 18,738 deaths, Leadenhall Market is seen deserted and closed up on St. Georges Day when the bars and pubs would normally be thriving on Englands patron saints day plus Shakespeares birth and death day, in the City of London, the capitals financial district, on 23rd April 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_lockdown-22-23-04-2020_1.jpg
  • As the UK governments lockdown restrictions during the Coronavirus pandemic continues, and number of UK reported cases rose to 138,078 with a total now of 18,738 deaths, Leadenhall Market is seen deserted and closed up on St. Georges Day when the bars and pubs would normally be thriving on Englands patron saints day plus Shakespeares birth and death day, in the City of London, the capitals financial district, on 23rd April 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_lockdown-21-23-04-2020_1.jpg
  • As the UK governments lockdown restrictions during the Coronavirus pandemic continues, and number of UK reported cases rose to 138,078 with a total now of 18,738 deaths, Leadenhall Market is seen deserted and closed up on St. Georges Day when the bars and pubs would normally be thriving on Englands patron saints day plus Shakespeares birth and death day, in the City of London, the capitals financial district, on 23rd April 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_lockdown-23-23-04-2020_1.jpg
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