Mark Rylance Part One

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Uploaded by on Oct 21, 2009

Former artistic director of Shakespeare's Globe Mark Rylance gives his thoughts on the Shakespeare authorship controversy and how he came to believe that the man from Stratford was not the real author.

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  • he was using his character's accent when he accepted the Tony.

  • @musicaltheatergeek79 When I have encountered him he has an accent somewhere in between American and English. He was born in England and raised in America, however, he spent many years in England so I wouldn't expect him to have an American accent.

  • @musicaltheatergeek79 I think it's just part of him showing off his acting ability.

  • Why does he have an English accent here? He was raised in America. And he didn't have one when he accepted his Tony two years ago.

  • Nice interview, but perplexing in the respect that Bacon is no longer a credible candidate. Too many squares into round pegs, his age, his inability to pen comic plays being the hardest to reconcile. The fact that Bacon was a relative of de Vere, and employed Ben Jonson as a secretary, allows one to place him and Jonson on the posthumous editing committee, along with the dedicatees of the 1st folio, Lord Oxford's son in law and brother, the Earls of Pembroke and Montgomery. It's Oxford!

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