Matthew Wolf
Thomas De Quincey, infamous for his memoir Confessions of an English Opium-Eater, is the major suspect in a series of ferocious mass murders identical to ones that terrorized London forty-three years earlier.
The blueprint for the killings seems to be De Quincey's essay On Murder...
The year is 1855. The Crimean War is raging. The incompetence of British commanders causes the fall of the English government. The Empire teeters. Amid this crisis comes opium-eater Thomas De Quincey, one of the most notorious and brilliant personalities of Victorian England. Along with his irrepressible...
Twenty eight florins a month is a huge price to pay, for a man to stand between you and the Wild.
Twenty eight florins a month is nowhere near enough when a wyvern's jaws snap shut on your helmet in the hot stink of battle, and the beast starts to rip the head from your shoulders....
Loyalty costs money. Betrayal, on the other hand, is free.
When the Emperor is taken hostage, the Red Knight and his men find their services in high demand — and themselves surrounded by enemies. The country is in revolt, the capital city...
8) Salomé
A dark tale of hubris, lust, and self-destruction...as told by a man who famously fell prey to those same impulses in his own life. Oscar Wilde wrote his original interpretation of the Biblical story of Salomé in French, and the play was so controversial that no theatre in England would produce it for nearly four decades.
Includes a conversation with director Michael Hackett and Wilde scholar David Rodes.
An L.A. Theatre Works full-cast production
...How many plays start in a dentist's chair and climax with a wild masquerade party? Shaw's hilarious comedy of errors involves mistaken identity, tangled courtship, and wise advice from "the perfect waiter." With a nod to Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest, Shaw's You Never Can Tell is a lightning-paced satire of romance and Edwardian society.
Recorded before a live audience at the UCLA James Bridges Theater in May 2015.
Director:
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