King Lear - Rose Rises To Royal Challenge
MEDIA RELEASE FOR IMMEDIATE USE
The Fortune Theatre and The Bacchanals present
William Shakespeare’s
King Lear Rose Rises To Royal Challenge
Veteran film and theatre actor Mick Rose has taken on Shakespeare’s greatest work with the opening night in just two weeks! After Edward Petherbridge, the actor who was to play Lear, had taken ill, director David Lawrence, turned to Rose. “He’s the only actor I know with the skill and guts to take on Lear within the timeframe we had. There has been an upside to not getting our Lear too early – King Lear is an astonishing text, and we’ve found so much in it that we couldn’t have if we’d just been focused on the title role,” says Lawrence.
Over the months that lead Edward Petherbridge in Britain and director David Lawrence in NZ communicated daily by phone and email, the co-producers battled ‘hurricanoes’ on the blasted heath of funding knock-backs, winning through to a viable position just as Edward arrived in Wellington, lines learned and ready to start rehearsal. But sudden illness put him in hospital.
A combination of changed medication and the long flight,
apparently.
Optimistic he would soon be joining them, the
rest of the cast worked on … But it was not to be. With
huge reluctance Edward had to concede he would not be fit
enough to take on what is one of the most demanding roles in
classical drama.
And Wellington actor Mick Rose has
stepped into the breach. Mick’s no stranger to King Lear,
his illustrious career began with his playing King Lear in
the 1988 Victoria University Summer Shakespeare, and was
again part of King Lear in 1997.
Mick joins Erin Banks
(Cordelia), Jacqueline Nairn (Regan), Amy Tarleton
(Goneril), Bruce Phillips (the Earl of Gloucester), Malcolm
Murray (the Earl of Kent), Alex Greig (Edmund), Sam Snedden
(Edgar), Salesi Le'ota (Oswald), Phil Grieve (the Duke of
Albany), Alistair Browning (the Duke of Cornwall), and David
Goldthorpe (Curan).
King Lear is an astonishing study of the human condition. As the play commences, Lear's kingdom is carefully ordered. But as his mind crumbles, the entire realm becomes bestial, revealing the savage in many and the saint in few.
ENDS