Tinker Bell
Patrick Flynn
Mary W. Schaller(Dramatic Publishing)
2.5 out of 5
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On the eve of the 500th anniversary of the battle of Bosworth Field, a court has been convened in the Halls of Eternity.
Richard III, the so-called "most infamous king in history," is the defendant.
The questions?
Is Richard truly deserving of his evil reputation or has he been the victim of a Tudor smear campaign?
The prosecutors are History and Rumor, while Richard stands in his own defense with only Charity to counsel him.
Venerable Time himself sits in judgment, and the audience becomes the jury.
Witnesses such as Thomas Moore and William Shakespeare are called to testify, and several scenes of the Bard's Richard III are enacted by The Royal Shakespeare Company as evidence in the trial.
Is Richard guilty of the murders of the Little Princes in the Tower?
Did he really kill his own brother, the Duke of Clarence, or Buckingham, Henry VI, Edward of Lancaster or even Anne, his own wife?
Is Richard III innocent?
Only the jury—the audience—can decide.
The play has a double ending (sentence or pardon) as the jury decides which it will be.