276°
Posted 20 hours ago

The Terrible Tudors (Horrible Histories)

£9.9£99Clearance
ZTS2023's avatar
Shared by
ZTS2023
Joined in 2023
82
63

About this deal

One catchy lyric states: “Henry VIII was a big fat man, loves to stuff his face from the frying pan.” These tunes, including rap interludes, powerful ballads, and catchy show tune-style songs, are playfully scattered throughout the show in just the right doses. They give Horrible Histories zest without overtaking the performance.

Knowing my love of Tudor history my husband came home one day with this book for me. I was very excited as I had watched several Horrible Histories clips that had been done from the TV show about the Terrible Tudors. They always made me laugh and I was quite excited to learn more interesting facts. It’s technically a new show, but there have been other ‘Terrible Tudors’ shows before, and they can’t have been that different, given this one boshes through so many of the dynasty’s greatest hits: there’s even a ‘which-side-of-the-audience-can-make-more-noise?’-off to ‘divorced, beheaded, died’.

Very unlike the beloved CBBC television series, this show only has a cast of two. A fantastic dynamic duo, Emma Swan as Drabb and Neal Foster as Dr. Dee, speed through the Tudor’s grisly history, starting from the murder of Richard III and ending at the death of Queen Elizabeth I. The pair are on stage the entire time, using their expert delivery and comedic timing to engage the audience. When most of the crowd are under the age of 12, it is a difficult feat to entertain them all for 70 minutes, but the pair does so with such ease.

Terry Deary’s spicy histories for tweens are now a sprawling brand as much a coherent series –this latest stage spin-off literally ends with the actors plugging another ‘Horrible Histories’ show, the river-borne ‘Terrible Thames’. The target audience is unlikely to lose much sleep over this. But as an adult who has seen various stage versions over the years,I can’t help butfeel that each new ‘Horrible Histories’show from Birmingham Stage Company (who hold the theatre rights) basically rolls off an assembly line, rather than emerges from years of torturous artistic deliberation. Behandelt wird die Zeit von 1485 (Henry VII, Henry VIII Vater) bis 1603 (end of terrible Tudors - in come the Slimy Stuarts]). There is a lot of information presented in this book but it is always interesting to read, so children should find it engaging. You could use this book during a guided reading, where children could demonstrate their comprehension of the text. They could use this book during history or topic work and list key points on the monarchy or England during this period. Fear not, Horrible Histories have you covered. get ready for Terrible Tudors live on stage in the West End. Settle in and meet people from history. There are horrid Henries and an evil Elizabeth, pull up a seat and prepare to hear the lore (and the lies) surrounding the torturing Tudors. We’re handed leaflets listing Tudor insults (“beef-witted malt-worm” and the like), but the script is far less colourful. Some of the puns are pretty ruff. The Church of England’s split from the Catholic church is briefly replayed as a Liverpool v Man City match but never hits the net. Much better is a comic account of the sneeze that might have inspired Greensleeves. Plus, the wiper of the king’s bottom makes a splash.It is part of the Horrible Histories series by Terry Deary and I have to say it’s just as enlightening and humorous in it’s gory and unique way as are the rest of them. It is a book of non-fiction filled with intriguing facts, questions, drawings, and fun quizzes, all to help enhance the learning experience and to really teleport you to the world of the Tudors. What became of the headless wives of Henry? Was there really a punch up with the Pope? Meet Bloody Mary and watch as Ed falls dead in his bed and survive the Spanish Armada. Whoever said history was boring didn’t know you could leave the nasty bits in! Horrible Histories on stage!

The Terrible Tudor timeline stretches from the end of The War of the Roses to the last day of Queen Elizabeth I’s reign. Besides the Tudor dynasty, you will read about life and death in Tudor times, including awful doctors and remedies that didn’t work, school and rules, crimes, thieves’ slang and punishments, “terrible Shakespeare” (this is how Terry Deary gratulates the English bard), theatre, the mystery of Christopher Marlowe’s sudden disappearance, witches and superstitions, strange food and endless banquets, Sir Francis Drake and the Spanish Armada, life for women and so on. Anyway, as ever it’s basically pretty good fun. I suppose thetruth‘Horrible Histories’always points tois that love of history comesdown to attitude. Here, we don’t actually learn much about Henry VIII, Elizabeth I or the other, lesser Tudors here that you wouldn’t learn in the classroom, it’s just that actors Ben Martin and Emma Swann gleefully barrel through the lurid bits at a rate of knots and make little effort to tax the audience with what it all means. Based on the international smash-hit and award-winning book series penned by author Terry Deary. The Horrible Histories series are brought to life on stage by Neal Foster and the Birmingham Stage Company. To date, more than a dozen different Horrible Histories shows have been staged, often running together as double bills.Now let’s leave the filth behind – there’s a lot of that in Tudor England anyway – and return to Shakespeare. I won’t bore you with Shakespearean insults, because you might already know some of them from the multitude of articles found on the internet about this subject; but I’m sure that you haven’t heard of Shakespeare’s curse. Yes, King Tut is not alone when it comes to curses. Some people speculate that plays unknown to us might be buried with Shakespeare’s body, but nobody had the courage to open the tomb and put the curse to the test. Have I stirred your interest a little? Here is the epitaph the bard wrote himself: Abgerundet wird das Wissen durch kleine Rätsel und Quizfragen um den Lerneffekt zu überprüfen (Wer war Lambert Simnel?). Eines der Hautthemen dieses Bandes der "Horrible Histories" ist Henry Tudor, seine Frauen und seine Kinder. Nicht nur den britischen Schulkindern bereitet diese Patchwork Familie Kopfschmerzen. Hier nun ein witziger Versuch Ordnung in die verschiedenen Henrys, Edwards, Marys und Elisabeths mit Nummern zu bringen. That’s fine, but you sense the franchise could be way more subversive if it made the effort: some brief asides about Elizabeth I’s hypocrisy regarding the slave trade feel way more troubling and genuinely informative than the five minutes devoted to explaining that yes, Henry VIII did indeed have his second wife executed. In the end, Terry Deary asks the reader if one wants to live in Tudor times. Are we thankful that we live in a different and better era or do we agree with the history books that the Tudor period was the “Golden Age of Good Queen Bess and Jolly Old Henry VIII?” (Loc. 1540)

Asda Great Deal

Free UK shipping. 15 day free returns.
Community Updates
*So you can easily identify outgoing links on our site, we've marked them with an "*" symbol. Links on our site are monetised, but this never affects which deals get posted. Find more info in our FAQs and About Us page.
New Comment