Richard III 1955
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
First performance | November 1633 |
Playwright | William Shakespeare |
Characters | King Edward IV |
Richard III | |
Lady Anne | |
Adaptations | Richard III |
Awards | European Film Award for Best Actor |
BAFTA Award for Best Costume Design | |
BAFTA Award for Outstanding British Film | |
Date of birth | October 2,1452 |
Zodiac sign | Libra |
Born | Fotheringhay Castle |
Died | Ambion Hill |
United Kingdom | |
Spouse | Anne Neville |
Buried | Leicester Cathedral, Leicester, United Kingdom |
Children | Edward of Middleham, Prince of Wales |
Katherine Plantagenet | |
John of Gloucester | |
Richard of Eastwell | |
Siblings | Edward IV of England |
Parents | Richard of York, 3rd Duke of York |
Cecily Neville, Duchess of York | |
Reviews | www.imdb.com |
Theatrical country of origin release date | UK |
Directors | Laurence Olivier |
Screenplay | Laurence Olivier |
Colley Cibber | |
Alan Dent | |
Nominations | Academy Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role |
Adapted from | Richard III |
Henry VI: Part 3 | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 650642 |
Richard III 1955 Life story
Having helped his brother King Edward IV (Cedric Hardwicke) take the throne of England, the jealous hunchback Richard, Duke of York (Laurence Olivier), plots to seize power for himself. Masterfully deceiving and plotting against nearly everyone in the royal court, including his eventual wife, Lady Anne (Claire Bloom), and his brother George, Duke of Clarence (John Gielgud), Richard orchestrates a bloody rise to power before finding all his gains jeopardized by those he betrayed. … MORE
Denzel Washington: I hadn't read or seen Macbeth
... Having first read Othello in college, he went on to play Richard Iii on stage and star in Kenneth Branagh s 1993 film version of Much Ado About Nothing, before appearing on Broadway in Julius Caesar...
Barnard Castle records best ever year for tourists
... Set high on a rock above the River Tees, Barnard Castle is a 12th Century fortress which belonged to Richard Iii...
Sir Antony Sher: A giant of the stage
... Richard Iii was physically warped; King Lear and Iago were consumed by rage and jealousy; Shylock was part of a spurned community...
Sir Antony Sher: Actor dies of cancer aged 72
... Sir Antony s film appearances included Shakespeare in Love and Mrs Brown, while his RSC credits included Richard Iii and Macbeth...
Metal detectorist finds small gold bible near York
... It was found on land near property once owned by Richard Iii (1483 to 1485) and it is speculated that it could have been owned by a female relative of his or of his wife Anne Neville...
How millions don't know they're related to royalty
... " Millions from Richard IiiTuri King, professor of genetics at the University of Leicester, has researched Richard Iii and says there are " literally millions" of people alive now who are descended from this 15th Century sovereign s family...
Obituary: Ian Holm
... He played Richard Iii in the RSC s 1964 wars of the roses series He secured a job at the Royal Shakespeare Company in Stratford, where his first recorded role was signed was as a spear carrier in a 1954 production of Othello...
Horrible Histories: Author Terry Deary on being 'a fish out of water'
... The latest stage adaptation of the books covers a lot of ground - Samuel Pepys, Richard Iii, Mary Queen of Scots, Elizabeth I and The Romans all feature...
How millions don't know they're related to royalty
It might seem like an unlikely and rare connection. How could a modern-day comedian turn out to be related to a medieval monarch?
On a recent episode of the TV genealogy show Who Do You Think You Are? Josh Widdicombe discovered he was a descendant of Edward I, who died More Than 700 years ago.
But he hasn't been the only example. Soap star Danny Dyer found he was related to Edward Iii , Alexander Armstrong was descended from William The Conqueror and the rower Sir Matthew Pinsent was another relative of Edward I.
So What 's going on? Are the genes that put warlords on thrones now producing a celebrity aristocracy? Or are these just remarkable and unusual, needle-in-a-haystack coincidences? According to genealogy experts, what this really shows is that if you look back far enough a surprisingly high number of people will find a royal ancestor.
Can you prove it?" It's not that uncommon, " Says Graham Holton, a tutor on a postgraduate course on genealogy at the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow. And to illustrate The Point , he's also another descendant of Edward I.
" Whether you can actually prove it is one of the issues. Probably lots of people who are would not be able to prove it with documentary evidence, " Says Mr Holton.
Using previous models of the numbers of descendants over the generations, he Says as a broad estimate there could be two million people alive now related to Edward I. Because The Records of most ordinary families would not stretch back that far, Most People would not know about their link.
But it means that on any street or crowded bus there could be an unwitting relation of this medieval monarch.
Mr Holton wasn't necessarily delighted about his royal connection. " It was very interesting. But being a Scot and Edward I being known as The Hammer of the Scots, I wasn't absolutely over The Moon . "
Millions from Richard IiiTuri King, professor of genetics at the University of Leicester, has researched Richard Iii and Says there are " literally millions" of people alive now who are descended from this 15Th Century sovereign's family. Prof King, a presenter on Bbc Two 's DNA Family Secrets , Says that it's often not understood how much family trees are likely to overlap when you go back so many generations.
" I always say to people We Are all related to each other. It's just A Question of degree, " she Says .
It's partly The Sheer numbers. By The Time you go back More Than 20 generations or so, based on the average reproduction rate, everyone will have millions of ancestors. Rather than separate trees, she Says family links become like interwoven thickets.
The idea of royalty is wrapped in ideas of being special and Apart - But Prof King Says the genetic reality is that we're all The Product of centuries of mixing and merging, migration, social rises and falls, interrelated in many ways. Many of us will have shared ancestors. And if someone has ancestry in Britain going Back To the Middle Ages , she Says it's actually more likely than not that they will be related to a branch of one of The Royals .
And when a TV show focuses on such a link to a monarch, she has to " try not to shout at the telly" about the huge number of other less glamorous ancestors who are being ignored on The Way .
Once you go even further back, a few thousand years or so, the genetics professor Says there are even bigger patterns of common ancestry, not just within Britain, But shared between people living in different countries and continents.
" We're all part of a giant family, " Says Prof King.
Being able to navigate a path Back To an identifiable medieval relative often depends on finding a " gateway ancestor" Says Else Churchill, a genealogist at The Society of Genealogists in London.
This would be someone rich, famous or perhaps infamous enough to be well documented and provide a trail for A Family historian. And if someone has such a pathway, she Says it's " fairly likely" they will bump into a royal relative.
She Says a genealogy study suggested that a child born in England in The Middle of the 20Th Century , who could trace their ancestry Back To England in the early 13Th Century , would have 80% of the population of The Time in their Family Tree .
" We're reliant on the survival of records, " she Says . " We've all got the same number of ancestors, we just don't always know their names, " she Says . And many of us will have " lineage Going Straight Back To a bunch of peasants".
Unexpected DNA resultPeople are increasingly turning to DNA for family links. And Ms Churchill found her own unexpected history. But it wasn't about being related to a medieval king.
" I've discovered through DNA that My Father is not My Father .
" So I've been researching The Churchills for 40 Years , so that came as a bit of a shock. I had no inkling, " she Says .
" I do know people who have been rocked by finding something like that. Personally I wasn't, But it did Make Me start thinking about identity. "
Ms Churchill, whose parents are no longer alive, Says it made her realise that she hadn't lost any sense of identity by finding out this lack of a genetic connection to her father or the ancestors she had researched for so long.
It didn't change her sense of family relationships, and it also didn't dampen her enthusiasm for The Detective work of genealogy.
" I don't get my identity by thinking that back in 1630 there was a guy called Thomas Churchill who's my ancestor. He's interesting historically, But he's not Really Me .
" Family is not necessarily genes, and family isn't necessarily ancestry, " she Says .
Source of news: bbc.com