Details
1623 John Heminges returns to his house on the site of the Globe Theatre with a precious package - the first edition of Wiliiam Shakesepeare's "Comedies, Histories and Tragedies" which he has just collected from the printer, Isaac Jaggard. Heminges and Henry Condell have spent seven years since William's death looking through prompt books, cue scripts, plot sheets, William's own writings, searching through the Tiring House of the Globe and studying previously printed versions of his plays. Finally they amassed an exhaustive collection and working with the Jaggards - William and Isaac - they have produced this wonderful document. Sitting down to study the result of his work, John Heminges reminisces about his life-long friendship with "Young Will" which had started 36 years before, in the White Swan in Stratford when William was 23 and John 31. Throughout his working life John had been at William's side, advising him and acting in his plays as well as managing The Chamberlain's (now The King's) Men, steering the company of which Will was such an important member, through the troubled waters of Elizabethan and Jacobean politics, organising royal patronage, fending off the tiresome Puritans and threats from the Plague
Creatives/Company
Author:
Colin David ReeseDirector:
Colin David Reese