Brice Stratford
Brice Stratford | |
---|---|
Nationality | British |
Occupation | Stage actor, Shakespearean director and actor-manager |
Organization | Owle Schreame theatre company |
Awards | Off West End Award, 2013 |
Brice Stratford is an English director and actor-manager.
He has worked primarily in classical and Shakespearean theatre, particularly with the Owle Schreame theatre company, which he founded in 2008.[1][2] He received an Off-West End award in 2013,[3] and established the Owle Schreame Awards in 2014.[4]
The Owle Schreame theatre company
Stratford founded the Owle Schreame theatre company in 2008 in Cambridge. In 2011 he produced, directed and performed in Measure for Measure on the site of the former Rose Theatre.[5][6] In 2013 the company's "Cannibal Valour" programme at St Giles-in-the-Fields in Camden consisted of The Unfortunate Mother by Thomas Nabbes (1640) and two other Renaissance plays,[7] Honoria and Mammon by James Shirley (1659) and Bussy D'Ambois by George Chapman. Stratford played the title character in Bussy D'Ambois.[8] In 2015 the company performed Ralph Roister Doister, written in 1553 by Nicholas Udall and thought to be the earliest surviving English comedy, at the Bread & Roses pub in Clapham; Stratford played the title role.[9]
References
- ↑ "Old Theatres New Radicalism: An Interview with Brice Stratford". The Oxford Student. Oxford University Student Union.
- ↑ "Why I Love Renaissance Theatre". Mouth London.
- ↑ "Full List of the 2012 Winners of the Offies 2013". OffWestEnd.com.
- ↑ "Brice Stratford talks to us about the Owle Schreame Awards of engraved glass skulls..." OffWestEnd.com, (2014)
- ↑ Walpole, Elinor (11 November 2011). "Review: Measure for Measure". A Younger Theatre. Retrieved 5 March 2013.
- ↑ Reynolds, Sophie (17 June 2013). "Shakespeare's First Acts: Measure for Measure". TheatreVoice. Archived 28 December 2013.
- ↑ "The Unfortunate Mother". TimeOut. 23 September 2013.
- ↑ Lawrence, Sandra (23 September 2013). "Bussy D'Ambois: Jacobean Tragedy in St Giles Church". The Londonist.
- ↑ Matthew Partridge, Review of Ralph Roister Doister Remotegoat, 25 February 2015.