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#Crucible Theatre
spiderliliez · 1 year
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Morfydd Clark (as Juliet Capulet) Freddie Fox (as Romeo Montague) From theater director Jonathan Humphreys The play had ran from 17th Sept. to 17th Oct. 2015 ROMEO & JULIET (2015) [+] MOFYDD CLARK [GIF Collection]  [+] ..more on “Romeo & Juliet” 🥀
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Paul Ready in rehearsals for The Contingency Plan
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morfyddclarkdaily · 6 months
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Morfydd Clark Circa 2015, Freddie Fox and Morfydd Backstage at the Crucible Theatre for “Romeo & Juliet”
◼ Morfydd Daily
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comediesmusicales · 7 months
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Joanna Ampil - The Engineer (Miss Saigon)
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artschoolsurvivor · 9 months
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Andiamo - For Sir Michael Boyd
Back in the Way back when, not long after I moved to Sheffield, I joined the Crucible Youth Theatre. At the time, this fine, fine gentleman was directing at the main theatre and also worked with said Youth Theatre. Naturally, our paths crossed many, many times, and we often had a good laugh in the green room, the occasional drink, etc. Moreover, the man taught me how to act, something I…
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vickster51 · 1 year
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Theatre Review - Standing At The Sky's Edge, Sheffield Crucible Theatre - A truly outstanding new musical
My Review of the superb Standing At The Sky's Edge @crucibletheatre #StandingAtTheSkysEdge #SkysEdge #theatre #review
There was one show in recent years that I had been sorry to miss and that was 2019’s original premiere of Standing At The Sky’s Edge, at Sheffield’s Crucible Theatre. Having spent a large part of my childhood here and it being where my parents still live, having a new show about such a great city, that I know so well, felt incredibly exciting. So, when it was scheduled to return in 2020 I booked…
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“I speak my own sins; I cannot judge another. I have no tongue for it.”
John Proctor, The Crucible
Happy World Theatre Day!!! 🎭
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not-mary-sue · 1 year
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Live theatre lets me experience some great audience reactions but my current favourite is when I was watching The Crucible and somebody went 'oooooh' when John forgot to say adultery in the ten commandments.
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ladysansalannister · 5 months
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Abigail Williams from The Crucible was simply born in the wrong generation. She would’ve ate as a Maenad
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trojani · 8 months
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Millie Alcock as Abigail Williams in Lyndsey Turner's The Crucible | Gielgud Theatre
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montygatorguy · 5 days
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some of my favorite moments from high school theatre in my first year
fall (we did the crucible)
- when our run crew chief licked an old dry erase marker he found backstage
- having to stand behind the set and make stair noises in the first scene
- eating a bag of goldfish for dinner in the chorus room
- taking naps on the benches during the courtroom scene and getting up to watch the ending
- our stage manager watching us from the furniture mez and coming down to say hello
- watching the guy who played john hale do a silly little dance backstage after leaving the courtroom scene
spring (we just finished this up! we did curtains)
- having the target from one of our set pieces fall on my wrist like 3 times in a row
- dancing to thataway backstage with the actors
- getting a shout out from one of the seniors i made friends with during my circle and absolutely crying my eyes out
- one of the run crew guys on my side bringing this little hippo plush and having him backstage
- cioffi having his mic bug out and watching our run crew chief go out ON STAGE to fix it
- cheering so loud after each show and just jumping up and down and having a great time
- watching my friends bring a boat on stage
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benicebefunny · 11 months
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If you'd like, you can reblog with your location and which playwrights you read (or wish you read) in school.
(You can actually reblog with anything you like in the tags. My tumblr is a testament to that fact.)
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Paul Ready in rehearsals for The Contingency Plan
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gleesonarchive · 9 months
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📷 Brinkhoff Mögenburg Brian Gleeson in @CrucibleOnStage w/ Milly Alcock
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do-you-know-this-play · 4 months
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yourbibillyhill · 1 year
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// The Crucible //
Arthur Miller
" The Devil is a wily one, and, until an hour before he fell, even God thought him beautiful in Heaven."
The play begins in medias res with Abigail being accused of witchcraft after discovering her, along with a few others, dancing in the forest at night. To escape such accusations, she and her confederates start laying the blame other women for the practice of witchcraft, spreading mass hysteria among the townspeople. To save themselves from punishment, the terror-stricken townspeople start accusing eachother of this occultism. A number of women are imprisoned and some are even hanged to death. But not everyone is a victim of this hysteria. We have John Proctor, who stands against these false accusations and tries to save his wife who also has been imprisoned with others which leads him to be called as the Devil's assistant. By the end of the play, Proctor has to decide between submitting to the hysteria or be hanged by the theocratic government.
The play is an allegory of the Salem Witch Trials as well as the violent aggression against the communists in the 1950s. Beginning in medias res, the play throws the audience into a similar confusion as the characters are in. It invites the audience to share in the hysteria. This play does have historic undertones but is also quite relatable in the present. Even today people have heightened response to everything, starting from simplest day to day discussions to religious or political matters in question.
This isn't supernatural scary, but, if you ask me, this can be pretty alarming considering the blame game leading to intensified emotional responses.
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