Dead Poets Live: Three Ages Of Yeats
Dead Poets Live return to The Coronet to lay the ghost of W. B. Yeats to rest with its verbatim retelling of his mystical life and work.
The poetry of W. B. Yeats arrived with the last wave of Romanticism and endured through the backwash of Modernism. It remained of its moment, yet out of step—much like Yeats himself, whose life was both intimately of its age and supremely out of time. He was guided by a mystical (and often mystifying) inner world: a deeply personal vision of history, symbol, and myth that inspired much of his work, which he continued to enlarge and renew throughout his life.
Part of this process of renewal was rewriting: not only his poems but the story of his life. Yeats shed styles and convictions as he changed, leaving behind a series of contradictory selves. Three Ages of Yeats is a verbatim piece, dramatising those contradictions by separating Yeats’ life into three ages, each age played by a different actor: Early Yeats, the Republican in a velvet jacket, writing dreamy love poetry for Maud Gonne; the more direct lyric poet, Middle Yeats, writing out of heartbreak and public life; and Late Yeats, indecent, unbiddable, never more experimental. In presenting his life and poetry in triptych, Dead Poets Live hope to capture Yeats in his astonishing variety.
Dead Poets Live have established a cult following at The Coronet Theatre for their dramatised readings of classic poetry, attracting some of Britain’s finest actors including Charlotte Rampling, Miranda Richardson, Toby Jones and Tom Hiddleston. All proceeds from their evenings go to the charity Safe Passage. Dead Poets Live is devised and supported by The TS Eliot Foundation.
Book tickets