24 October 2025
In 2016 the Guardian reported new evidence, based on computational analysis, that Christopher Marlowe collaborated with William Shakespeare on parts of the Henry VI trilogy of plays - a collaboration subsequently endorsed by the New Oxford Shakespeare imprint of Oxford University Press which now also credits Marlowe. Liz Duffy Adams’ new play ‘Born With Teeth’, which we saw at Wyndham’s Theatre in London on Saturday, imagines Shakespeare and Marlowe working together on the Henry VI plays. It’s an entertaining and intriguing two-hander which, in this Royal Shakespeare Company production, directed by Daniel Evans, provides a star vehicle for two very successful TV actors, Ncuti Gatwa (as Kit Marlowe) and Edward Bluemel (as Shakespeare). Both actors entirely justify their casting with impressive stage performances, showing (across three short acts) the shift in power in the relationship between the two playwrights. The script is clever, witty and often very funny - using contemporary English in a period setting to make the interactions between the two writers believable and relevant. But, even at just 90 minutes without an interval, the play feels too long for its material. It’s an interesting thought-experiment which might have made a really strong 60 minute fringe play but doesn’t have enough content to sustain itself but is worth seeing for the performances by Gatwa and Bluemel. And it helped with my ongoing game of Doctor Who bingo: Ncuti Gatwa is the fifth Doctor I have seen on stage (following Peter Davison, David Tennant, Christopher Eccleston and Jodie Whittaker, since you ask!).
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