Novels, movies, shows about theatre

My fave. Diana Rigg plays his daughter.

Theatre of Blood goes on the list.

I love Victor/Victoria.

Is the film version of Gypsy worthwhile in its own right? I love the musical of course.

Ray was a catcher for the Cleveland Indians. I believe you mean the choreographer, Bob.

Oops. Yeah, sorry, you’re right. I’ll blame my mistake on the fact that Ray Fosse is one of the announcers for my team, the Oakland A’s.

A more specific question has occurred to me –

The “controversy” about the ‘authorship’/conspiracy of Shakespeare – have there ever been movies, plays, novels about it?

My semi-crackpot theatre teacher in high school had a book called ‘The Murder of the Man who was Shakespeare’ which was in the firmly-crackpot Christopher-Marlowe-wrote-Shakespeare camp. I know there has been fiction about Marlowe, but has any fiction dived into this or the other ‘theories’ (Edward de Vere, Queen Elizabeth(!), etc.)?

I have not seen it, but there is a movie - Anonymous.

H.N. Gibson, who for a while was one of the foremost experts on the “authorship question” to take the “stuff and nonsense” (aka, “Stratfordian”) position, said that if Calvin Hoffman had written The Murder of the Man who was Shakespeare as a work of fiction instead of a crackpot conspiracy theory, he (that is, Gibson) would have counted it among his favorite books.

Yes, of course. Here’s one movie about this sort of thing.

It doesn’t “dive into” it in the sense of exploring it, but this comes up in Eric Flint’s 1632, in which one character claims that it’s well known Shakespeare didn’t write the plays attributed to him.

Yes, that’s my feeling too! I read (some of) it, at the urging of the aforementioned teacher, and thought, even at the time, that it would make a great novel or movie.

Will see if I can find ‘Anonymous’ although it doesn’t sound that good.

The Muppet Show

For the record, *Noises Off! is one of our favorite movies - my husband and I could probably spend an entire weekend communicating in nothing but quotes from this. But it probably helped that we both saw the movie before seeing the play. I acknowledge the play is probably better, but the movie is still hilarious, and has such an amazing cast! (Michael Caine, Julie Hagerty, John Ritter, Christopher Reeve, Denholm Elliot, and Carol freaking Burnett!)
*
In the Bleak Midwinter
(a/k/a A Midwinter’s Tale) is an amazing little movie. It’s funny and absorbing and touching and quirky. The only good thing about my bout of appendicitis in 2009 (other than modern medicine curing me) was that I wound up re-watching this at 2am because the oncoming symptoms were keeping me awake.