The Year That Changed My Life (Part 4)
• March 24, 2018 • Leave a CommentPosted in 1989, Great Britain, Theater, Travel, Writing
Tags: Bath, Bearflat, Brighstone, Bristol, Bristol Theatre Department, Cambridge Lodge, Christopher Robinson, Cowes, Edward William Godwin, Ellen Terry, Endymion, Farringford, Ibsen, Isle of Wight, Jane Tapley, Keith Barker, London, Midsummer Night's Dream, New Orleans, Newport, Our Country's Good, Portland Square, Richard J. Hutchings, Sheridan House, tandoori, Tennyson, Tenterden, The Briary, the Old Vic, The Wandering Moon, Theatre Royal, Western Daily Press
The Year That Changed My Life (Part 3)
• March 4, 2018 • Leave a CommentPosted in 1989, Great Britain, Hopkins, Travel, Writing
Tags: Albion Hotel, Bachman Turner Overdrive, Bath, Bedford Road, Brian Hinton, Brighton, British Wallace Shawn, Buddy Holly, Cambridge Lodge, Cameron House, Dimbola, Disneyland, Ellen Terry, Farringford, filmmaking, Freshwater, G. F. Watts, Hastings, Isle of Wight, Julia Margaret Cameron, London, Moorlands Manor, Mrs. Wright, Portsmouth, R.J. Hutchings, Reade's, Ryde, screenplays, Southampton, Tennyson, Tenterden, The Briary, The Hard, Totland Bay, Virginia Woolf
The Year That Changed My Life (Part 2)
• February 23, 2018 • Leave a CommentPosted in 1989, Great Britain, Hopkins, Travel
Tags: Ashford, Beatrice, Bill, Dick, Edward Godwin, Eight Bells, Ellen Terry, Forbes-Robertson, Freshwater, Gloria, Hamlet, Henry Irving, Isle of Wight, Kent, King John, Lindsay, Macbeth, Margaret Weare, Nigel, Ophelia, Portia, Portsmouth, pub grub, Ryde, Smallhythe, Steve, Tenterden, The Hard, The Wandering Moon, Wool Pack, Working Man's Club, WWII POW, Wynn, Yanks
Working on a Miss Terry (Part 2)
• July 20, 2017 • Leave a CommentPosted in 1988, 1989, Great Britain, Music, Theater, Writing
Tags: Alfred Lord Tennyson, Arthur Lewis, Arthur Sullivan, Berlin Wall, Clapham, Colin Vaines, Coventry, Cox and Box, David Puttnam, Dimbola, Edith Craig, Edward William Godwin, Ellen Terry, Engima Productions, Farringford, Felix Mendelssohn, Found Drowned, Freshwater Bay, G. F. Watts, George du Maurier, Isle of Wight, James Knowles, Joy Melville, Kate Terry, Mark Lemon, Metaphysical Society, Offenbach, Punch magazine, Reverend Charles Pritchard, screenwriting, Shakespeare, Smallhythe Kent, The Wandering Moon, Tom Taylor, Victorian theater, Victoriana, William Boyce
Working on a Miss Terry (Part 1)
• July 14, 2017 • Leave a CommentPosted in 1988, 1989, Great Britain, Theater, Writing
Tags: Alfred Lord Tennyson, carte-de-visite, Charles Kean, Clapham, Coventry, Dylan Thomas, Edward William Godwin, Ellen Terry, Found Drowned, Freshwater Bay, G. F. Watts, Henry Irving, Henry Princep, Isle of Wight, James Knowles, Julia Margaret Cameron, Kate Terry, Long Acre, Lyceum Theatre, Metaphysical Society, Queen’s Theatre, Reverend Charles Pritchard, Richard Burbage, Sarah Princep, Sarah Siddons, screenwriting, Shakespeare, The Wandering Moon, The Winter’s Tale, Tom Taylor, Victorian theater, Victoriana, William Macready