Glenn, Please fill me in with details about Canary Wharf since I'm going over THE LONG GOOD FRIDAY with my class next Thursday. I assume you are referring to the gentifrication which accelerated under Thatcher and even destroyed the old Tiger Bay community in Cardiff.
Now, to return to the point of the last posting. There has always been this snobbery against American actors doing Shakespeare. A few years ago, I met Brett Halsey who is now teaching acting at the University of Costa Rica. He is a person who takes acting VERY seriously despite the fact that he has mostly appeared in commercial films in Europe and America. Brett began his training in the old Universal Studios acting school with Clint Eastwood where both learned on the job and in acting classes. I think Brett also mentioned this hostility against Americans playing classical roles. Yet, just look at Gayle Hunnicutt appearing in Henry James adaptations in the 1980s and Gillian Anderson's recent accomplished performance as Lady Dedlock in the BBC TV adaptation of BLEAK HOUSE. Further back, Paul Robeson played Othello on the British stage and I think Robert Ryan also portrayed Iago.
Welles was just the tip of a very important iceberg but still the prejudices remain despite the evidence.



