Wednesday 11 October 2023 | 12.15pm - onwards
Venue: Theatre Royal
Price: FREE - Booking required
Rebecca Morris, Heritage and Learning Partnerships Manager, and Shakespeare Institute alumni, presents this illustrated talk on Shakespeare's First Folio as part of the 37 Plays Festival. Contextualising and looking at the historical importance of the 1623 Folio, this look at the first collection of Shakespeare's work will also look at how it has inspired The RSC's 37 Plays Project.
Sorry, this event has passed
Once the home of Victorian Prime Minister, William Lamb who, as Second Viscount…
The 1620s House & Garden is a rare example of a family home built in the 13th century and…
The Derwent valley, upstream from Derby on the southern edge of the Pennines, contains a…
Most National Trust properties inspire thoughts of historic mansions, wealth and grandeur…
Haddon Hall stands as one of England’s most enchanting and best-preserved fortified manor…
Bosworth Battlefield Heritage Centre tells the dramatic story of the Battle fought on…
Known as the 'Gothic Gem of the Midlands', Arbury Hall has been the ancestral home of the…
Stanford has been the home of the Cave family, ancestors of the present owner, since 1430…
Nestled in rural Northamptonshire, Kelmarsh Hall and Gardens is an elegant Grade I listed…
Dating from 1702 the Hall’s beauty is matched by the magnificence of the gardens and the…
Lamport Hall is a hidden gem in Northamptonshire boasting wonderful gardens, stunning…
Once the largest private house in England and Elizabethan England’s greatest house, then…
Nestled in the heart of West Yorkshire, Nostell is a stunning example of Georgian…
Sculptures, paintings, furniture and family monuments. A Georgian chapel, tearooms,…
Located in a rural area of northwest England, free from radio interference, Jodrell Bank…