The History Of European Theatre

A podcast by Philip Rowe - Mondays

Mondays

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185 Episodes

  1. Shakespeare’s Borrowed Feathers: A Conversation with Dr. Darren Freebury-Jones

    Published: 7/15/2024
  2. Henry 6th part 1: ‘My Thoughts Are Whirled Like a Potter's Wheel’

    Published: 7/8/2024
  3. 'To Gender or Not to Gender': A Conversation With Margaret Oakes

    Published: 7/1/2024
  4. Hunt, Grenfell and the Satyr Play

    Published: 6/24/2024
  5. William of Stratford, a Coda: The History of New Place

    Published: 6/17/2024
  6. William of Stratford part 4: ‘With Mirth and Laughter Let Old Wrinkles Come.’

    Published: 6/10/2024
  7. The Afterlife of Anne Hathaway: A Conversation with Prof Katherine Scheil

    Published: 6/3/2024
  8. William of Stratford Part 3: ‘Would I Were in an Alehouse in London’

    Published: 5/27/2024
  9. Imagining Shakespeare’s Wife: A Conversation with Prof Katherine Scheil

    Published: 5/20/2024
  10. William of Stratford Part 2: 'He Wears The Rose of Youth Upon Him'

    Published: 5/13/2024
  11. That Shakespeare Life: A Conversation with Cassidy Cash

    Published: 5/6/2024
  12. William of Stratford Part 1: 'To You Your Father Should Be As a God’

    Published: 4/29/2024
  13. Polish Theatre Revisited: A Conversation with Dr Agata Luksza

    Published: 4/22/2024
  14. Shakespeare In His Time

    Published: 4/15/2024
  15. Dionysus and Xanthias: The First Double Act

    Published: 4/8/2024
  16. From the English Renaissance to Shakespeare and Jonson

    Published: 4/1/2024
  17. Adventures In Theatre History Philadelphia with Peter Schmitz

    Published: 1/9/2024
  18. Schedule Announcement

    Published: 1/2/2024
  19. Coda: The Life of Augustine Phillips

    Published: 12/26/2023
  20. English Renaissance Conclusions (sort of)

    Published: 12/11/2023

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A podcast tracing the development of theatre from ancient Greece to the present day through the places and people who made theatre happen. More than just dates and lists of plays we'll learn about the social. political and historical context that fostered the creation of dramatic art.This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis: Chartable - https://chartable.com/privacy Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.