In 1609, William Shakespeare published a collection of 154 sonnets, creating what is arguably the greatest lyric sequence in English literature - and at the center of this masterpiece lies a mystery that has endured for centuries. What are the identities of “the young man” and “the dark lady” to whom all but two of the sonnets allude? This moving performance brings to life the gritty reality of Shakespeare’s England, bits of the Bard’s plays and poems, and the consummate poet and dramatist himself as it exposes these personages unseen but so keenly felt in Shakespeare’s sonnets and in his life. Rupert Graves, Tom Sturridge, Indira Varma, Anna Chancellor, and Zoë Wanamaker star. Contains mature themes and explicit language. Some content may be objectionable. Produced by the Open University.
Acting
Rupert Graves plays Will as messy, horny, and desperately human
Production
Muddy streets, candlelight, and plague—Elizabethan England looks ROUGH
Writing
Sonnets woven into dialogue like breadcrumbs through history
Director
John McKay
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Tom Sturridge was 23 playing teenage Herbert; he and Graves had zero scenes together until the final 10 minutes.
The Open University funded this as educational content, making it possibly the horniest public television ever subsidized by UK taxpayers.
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Reactions from the web
2022: Tom Sturridge — your time has come! 🙏🏻💔🙏🏽
@Cristobels-Green-Boots 14
RUPERT GRAVES
@sophiethedinosaur9345 4
TOM HIDDLESTON IS IN THIS.
@TheAmbkn1 4
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