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The Life of Galileo - Photographs
By tmarden
May 2, 2008, 09:24

The Life of Galileo

by Bertolt Brecht

 

Translated by Howard Brenton

 

The action of the play covers 28 years in the life of Galileo Galilei, from 1609 to 1637

 

Scene One

Galileo’s study in Padua

Scene Two

The Great Arsenal of Venice by the Harbour

Scene Three

Galileo’s Study in Padua

Scene Four

Galileo’s House in Florence

Scene Five

Galileo’s House in Florence inside and out

Scene Six

Hall of the Collegium in Rome

Scene Seven

Cardinal Bellarmin’s house in Rome

Scene Eight

The Palace of the Forentine Ambassador in Rome

 

 

INTERVAL

 

 

Scene Nine

Galileo’s House in Forence

Scene Ten

A Market Place

Scene Eleven

Lobby of the Medici Palace in Florence

Scene Twelve

A Room in the Vatican

Scene Thirteen

The Palace of the Forentine Ambassador in Rome

Scene Fourteen

A Large Room in a Country House near Florence

Scene Fifteen

A Small Italian Border Town

 

 

Costumes

Wynfydd Thomas

Set Design & Construction

Alan Etherington, Chris Williams

Props

Laura Musselbrook, Elaine Ferguson

Lighting

Tom Newman

Sound

Noah Broad

Stage Management

Ali Boucher

Front of House

Neil Durham, Kelvin Meek

Direction

Chris Williams

 

Costumes hired from the South London Theatre and the Richmond Shakespeare Society, Props hired from the Royal National Theatre

 

Cast in Order of Appearance

 

Chess Player One

Ben Elliott

 

A Very Thin Monk

Matthew Walker

Chess Player Two

Christian Eede

 

The Very Old Cardinal

Jordan Derrick

Galileo Galilei

Stephen Bailey

 

Father Christian Clavius

Phil Rickner

Andrea Sarti

Gabriel Nicklin

 

The Little Monk

Dominic Powell

Mrs. Sarti

Zoë Apostolides

 

The Cardinal Inquisitor

Eliot Henderson

Ludovico Marsili

Nick Walker

 

Cardinal Barberini, later Pope Urban VIII

Mina Arsanious

The Bursar of Padua University

Matthew Walker

 

Cardinal Bellamin

Stevn Goovaerts

The Doge

Pavlos Christodoulou

 

Filippo Mucius, a scholar

Freddy Thomas

Senator One

Jordan Derrick

 

Signor Gaffone, Rector of the University of Pisa

Will Thornton

Senator Two

Freddy Thomas

 

The Ballad-Singer

Will Evans

Senator Three

Callum Blackford

 

The Ballad-Singer’s Wife

Frances Yarlett

Sagredo, Galileo’s friend

Peter Sugden

 

Child

James Collyer

Virginia, Galileo’s daughter

Nicole Evans

 

Chorus One

Pavlos Christodoulou

Federzoni, a lens grinder

Wesley Nash

 

Chorus Two

Jamie Muir

Cosimo de Medici

Andrew Narouz

 

Chorus Three

Daniel McKeown

The Court Chamberlain

Phil Rickner

 

Chorus Four

Jack Evans

The Theologian

Freddy Thomas

 

Vanni, an ironfounder

Josh Heath

The Philosopher

Will Thornton

 

Scary man

Omar Rana

The Mathematician

Josh Heath

 

An Official

Joseph Wilson

Lackey

Joseph Wilson

 

A High Official

Sean Barry

Soldier One

Will Evans

 

An individual

Will Thornton

Soldier Two

Jamie Muir

 

A Monk

Devis Kawuki

Runing Man

Devis Kawuki

 

A Peasant

Andrew Narouz

The Old Woman

Frances Yarlett

 

A Frontier Guard

Alex Finch

Bread Man

Callum Blackford

 

A Clerk

Sean Barry

A fat Prelate

Pavolos Christodoulou

 

First Boy

Omar Rana

A Scholar

Daniel McKeown

 

Second Boy

James Collyer

A Monk

Sean Barry

 

Third Boy

Will Evans

Second Monk

Omar Rana

 

 

 

First Astronomer

Alex Finch

 

 

 

Second Astronomer

Joseph Wilson

 

 

 

 

Bertolt Brecht was born in Augsburg on 10 February 1898 and died in Berlin on 14th August 1956.  He grew to maturity as a playwright in the frenetic years of the twenties and early thirties, with such plays as The Threepenny Opera, The Mother and Saint Joan of the Stockyards.  He left Germany when Hitler came to power in 1933, eventually reaching the United States in 1939, where he remained until 1947.  It was during this period of exile that such masterpieces as The Life of Galileo, Mother Courage and The Caucasian Chalk Circle were written.  Shortly after he returned to Europe in 1947 he founded the Berliner Ensemble, and from then until his death was mainly occupied in producing his own plays.

 

 

 



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