American Repertory Theatre

Thomas Derrah as Richard II

Richard II

by William Shakespeare

at the Loeb Drama Center
May 11 - June 10, 2001

Director: Robert Woodruff
Set designer: David R. Gammons
Costume designer: Catherine Zuber
Lighting designer: Stephen Strawbridge
Sound designer: Darren L. West

Movement by Saar Magal

Richard, son of Edward the Black Prince, ascended the throne of England at the age of ten. An elegant, luxurious, sensitive monarch, "too favorable" to his enemies and oblivious to his people's suffering, Richard is ultimately stripped of his wealth, power, and kingdom - and with them his sense of self. Innovative director Robert Woodruff returns to stage this most lyrical and psychologically complex of Shakespeare's history plays.

Cast - Synopsis - Photos - Links

 

CAST - in order of appearance

Thomas Derrah . . . King Richard II

Jonno Roberts

. . . Young Man

John Feltch . . . Duke of Gloucester (Richard's uncle)

Alvin Epstein

. . . John of Gaunt (Duke of Lancaster, Richard's uncle)

Karen MacDonald

. . . Dutchess of Gloucester

Jodi Lin . . . Queen to Richard
Darrin Browne . . . Richard's attendant
Remo Airaldi . . . Bishop of Carlisle

Benjamin Evett

. . . Thomas Mowbray (Duke of Norfolk)

Bill Camp

. . . Henry Bolingbroke (Duke of Hereford, Gaunt's son)

Sean Dugan

. . . Aumerle (York's Son)

Trevor Oswalt
Jim Spencer

Tim Kang

. . . Bagot
. . . Greene
. . . Bushy

]
] Richard's favorites
]

John Douglas Thompson

. . . Duke of York (Richard's uncle)

John Feltch
Robert Ross
Jonno Roberts

. . . Earl of Northumberland
. . . Lord Ross
. . . Lord Willoughby

]
] Bolingbroke's supporters
]

Benjamin Evett

. . . Sir Stephen Scroope

Karen MacDonald

. . . Dutchess of York

Tim Kang

. . . Sir Piers Exton

Jim Spencer

. . . Prison keeper

Ensemble: Jason Beaubier, James Dittami, Seth Reich, Kieran Smiley, Chris Starr, and members of the Company.

 

SYNOPSIS

King Edward III of England had seven sons, among them the Duke of Gloucester, John of Gaunt, the Duke of York, and Edward the Black Prince. When Edward III died in 1377, his ten-year old grandson Richard, son of the Black Prince, succeeded him to the throne as King Richard II.

While Richard was a child, John of Gaunt and the Dukes of Gloucester and York effectively ruled the kingdom, but Richard soon asserted his independence from his uncles and chose his own advisors, including John Bushy, William Bagot, and Henry Green, to help him govern.

In 1397, shortly before Shakespeare's play begins, the Duke of Gloucester is murdered, probably at Richard's command. Gaunt's son, Henry Bolingbroke, quarrels with Thomas Mowbray, Duke of Norfolk, over the cause of Gloucester's death, and Richard banishes both men from England. The shock of his son's exile weakens the elderly Gaunt, who soon dies. Richard seizes Gaunt's property and belongings and sets out for Ireland where he hopes to raise further revenue to fund his extravagant lifestyle. But he reckons without Henry Bolingbroke, who, hearing of his father's death, secretly returns from France to claim his birthright from Richard.

 

PHOTOS

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RELATED LINKS

This page updated June 11, 2001

Thomas Derrah and Bill Camp

Thomas Derrah and Bill Camp

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