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Theatre too often uses regional accents for laughs, or as traits of hollow characters with no personal agency. This must change if society is to truly open up, argues Sonya Hale.

In ‘I bet Nicholas Hynter doesn’t have to do this’, a brilliantly titled chapter of Glory and the Garden (eds. Ros Merkin & Kate Dorney) , Gwenda Hughes chronicles the complaint letters she received as artistic director of The New Vic, then The Victoria Theatre in North Staffordshire. Amongst these are a series of moans directed at Northern Broadsides’ Shakespeare, including one outraged-of-Cheshire writer who felt horrified at the bard’s words being so unsuitably intoned by those with (gas...Keep reading on Exeunt

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Theatre’s missing accents (Exeunt Magazine)