**Colorado Shakespeare Festival – 2002**
**Theatricum Botaniucm – 2011**
Richard, the Yorkist Duke of Gloucester, has not stopped plotting since the defeat of Henry VI. He conspires to play his brothers, Edward (now King Edward IV) and George, Duke of Clarence, against each other in an attempt to gain the crown for himself. By insinuating charges of treason against George, Richard has him arrested. He also brazenly woos Anne, widow of the murdered Prince of Wales, in the midst of her husband’s funeral procession. In the course of events, Edward IV, who is deathly ill at the beginning of the play, dies; Richard has already arranged for George to be murdered while imprisoned, and so it stands that Richard will serve as regent while Edward’s son (also named Edward) can come of age.
In order to “protect” the Prince of Wales and his younger brother, Richard has them stay in the Tower of London. He then moves against Edward’s loyalist lords; Vaughan, Rivers, Hastings, and Grey are first imprisoned, then executed. Then, with the aid of Buckingham, Richard declares that Edward IV’s offspring are technically illegitimate. In an arranged public display, Buckingham offers the throne of England to Richard, who is presumably reluctant to accept. By this time, Richard has alienated even his own mother, who curses him as a bloody tyrant.
By now, Richard needs to bolster his claims to the crown; the young princes locked away in the Tower of London must be disposed of. Buckingham, until now Richard’s staunchest ally, balks at this deed. Richard gets a murderer to do the deed, but turns on Buckingham for his insubordination. Now Richard—conveniently a widower after the suspicious demise of Anne—makes a ploy to marry the late King Edward’s daughter, his niece. Elizabeth, Edward’s widow, makes Richard believe that she agrees to the match; however, Elizabeth has arranged for a match with the Earl of Richmond.
Richmond, at this point in the action, is bringing over an army from France to war against Richard. Buckingham, finding himself out of favor with the king, gives his allegiance to Richmond. However, Buckingham is captured when his army is thrown into disarray by floods, and Richard has him executed immediately. Richmond, who has undergone his own troubles crossing the English Channel, finally lands his army and marches for London. The armies of Richard and Richmond encamp near Bosworth Field; the night before the battle, Richard is visited by the sundry ghosts of the people he has slain, all of whom foretell his doom.
At Bosworth, Richard is unhorsed in the combat. Richmond finds him, and the two of them clash with swords. Richmond prevails and slays Richard, to be crowned as King Henry VII there on the field of battle. This is the founding of the Tudor line of kings and the end of the War of the Roses.
Dramatis Personae:
- King Edward the Fourth
- Edward, Prince of Wales, afterwards King Edward the Fifth
- Richard, Duke of York
- George, Duke of Clarence
- Richard, Duke of Gloucester, afterwards King Richard the Third
- A Young Son of Clarence
- Henry, Earl of Richmond, afterwards King Henry the Seventh
- Cardinal Bourchier
- Thomas Rotherham, Archbishop of York
- John Morton
- Duke of Buckingham
- Duke of Norfolk
- Earl of Surrey
- Earl Rivers
- Marquess of Dorset
- Lord Grey
- Earl of Oxford
- Lord Hastings
- Lord Stanley, Earl of Derby
- Lord Lovel
- Sir Thomas Vaughan
- Sir Richard Ratcliff
- Sir William Catesby
- Sir James Tyrell
- Sir James Blunt
- Sir Walther Herbert
- Sir Robert Brakenbury
- Christopher Urswick, a priest
- Another Priest
- Tressel and Berkeley
- Lord Mayor of London
- Sheriff of Wiltshire
- Elizabeth, Queen of King Edward the Fourth
- Margaret, widow of King Henry the Sixth
- Duchess of York
- Lady Anne
- Margaret Plantagenet
- Lords and other Attendants
- A Pursuivant, Scrivener, Citizens
- Murderers, Messengers, Soldiers
- Ghosts of Richard III’s victims
*Summary taken from the Shakespeare Resource Center