Prefaces To Shakespeare Gets A New Name And Broadcast Details



The show previously known as Prefaces To Shakespeare has now been renamed Shakespeare Uncovered and begins on BBC Four on Tuesday 19th June at 9pm as part of the BBC season devoted to the Bard. The programmes are repeated on Thursdays at 10.30pm.

David Tennant will be presenting one of six hour-long documentaries, each of which feature some of Shakespeare's best-loved plays. The series begins with Joely Richardson who, with contributions from her mother, Vanessa Redgrave, explores Shakespeare's women. Episode 2, on Tuesday 26th June, features Ethan Hawke, who studies Macbeth.

From the website of producers Ten Alps:


Shakespeare Uncovered

Series begins Tuesday 19 June 2012 - BBC
Produced by Blakeway `Shakespeare Uncovered' is a series of six films that tell the stories behind and reveal the wonders within some of Shakespeare's greatest plays.
This extraordinary series of unique films, will combine new analysis and personal passion. Through these films we investigate and reveal the extraordinary world and works of William Shakespeare and their still vivid impact today. The films combine interviews with actors, directors, and scholars, visits to all the most important and exciting locations – clips from some of the most celebrated productions and excerpts from the plays especially rehearsed and performed at Shakespeare’s Globe.
In Twelfth Night and As You Like It, Joely Richardson investigates (with a major contribution from her mother Vanessa Redgrave) the legacy of the two great comedies and the great comic heroines created by Shakespeare in those hugely popular plays.
In Macbeth, Ethan Hawke sets out to prepare himself for the possibility of playing the role by uncovering the true story behind the play, seeing some of the greatest productions and discovering the extraordinary insights into the criminal mind that Shakespeare reveals.
In Richard II, Derek Jacobi returns to a role he played 30 years ago, helps actors at the Globe with aspects of the play, reveals why it might have cost Shakespeare his life - and shares with us some of the extraordinary political parallels within the play that still resonate today – (with interviews and clips from the new BBC film of the play).
In Hamlet, David Tennant whose own RSC performance was a huge hit, meets other actors who have played the role – from the legendary David Warner in the 1960s to the recent Jude Law. He also tries, alongside Simon Russell Beale and Ben Whishaw to unravel the meaning of the play and the reason why it is considered the greatest play Shakespeare ever wrote
In Henry IV and Henry V, Jeremy Irons (who is playing Henry IV in the new BBC films) uncovers the extraordinary appeal of Shakespeare’s “History Plays”. He unravels the differences between the real history and the drama that Shakespeare creates. He discovers what William’s sources were – and how he distorts them!  And he invites us behind the scenes at the filming of some of the most important scenes in the new films of all of these plays.
In The Tempest, the legendary director Trevor Nunn, (who has directed 30 of Shakespeare’s 37 plays and is determined to complete them all before he retires), takes us through the magical and mysterious world created in Shakespeare’s last complete play. He uncovers where Shakespeare got this material from and the strange personal insights hidden within it. It is a truly experimental work but sadly perhaps it is also Shakespeare’s farewell to the theatre.  Within only a few years of its completion he died.

The broadcast date for David Tennant's programme on Hamlet is not yet known



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