The Hands of Elizabeth I with Corina Apostu
In 1557, when the future Elizabeth I was just twenty-four, the Venetian ambassador Giovanni Michiel observed that she was ‘tall …
Q&A: Rosamund Gravelle on the play ‘Three Queens’
This week, I am delighted to welcome playwright Rosamund Gravelle to Tudor Extra to discuss her latest play, Three Queens, …
Q&A: Leah Redmond Chang on ‘Young Queens’
The boldly original, dramatic intertwined story of Catherine de’ Medici, Elisabeth de Valois, and Mary, Queen of Scots―three queens exercising power in a world dominated by men.
Q&A: Heather Darsie on ‘Children of the House of Cleves’
Children of the House of Cleves describes and analyzes the lives of Sybylla, Anna, Wilhelm and Amalia, the children of John III, Duke of Cleves.
Interview with Tudor Author Adrienne Dillard
Last month, I had the immense privilege of sitting down with best-selling author Adrienne Dillard. Adrienne’s three books (‘Cor Rotto: …