What do Prince and Dickens have in common? A blog on why Nick Hornby is right to look for the answer to why we cling to the notion of individual genius in remarkable comparisons between different artists. A blog on Nick Hornby (2022) ‘Dickens & Prince: A Particular Kind of Genius’. A blog for Prince’s princely fan @JustinCurley4
What do Prince and Dickens have in common? A blog on why Nick Hornby is right to look for the answer to why we cling to the notion of individual genius in remarkable comparisons between different artists. A blog on Nick Hornby (2022) ‘Dickens & Prince: A Particular Kind of Genius’, Penguin Random House UK. … More What do Prince and Dickens have in common? A blog on why Nick Hornby is right to look for the answer to why we cling to the notion of individual genius in remarkable comparisons between different artists. A blog on Nick Hornby (2022) ‘Dickens & Prince: A Particular Kind of Genius’. A blog for Prince’s princely fan @JustinCurley4


![‘The biggest task of the show is the actress playing Nora’s (sic.). … A more selfish actress would make the whole play about herself, but not Hannah [Ellis Ryan]. For her it’s very much an ensemble. Michael Meyer, the translator, always used to say that actors who want to grandstand, who aren’t willing to play relationships, always fail with Ibsen, because what fascinated him was the complexity of relationships’. This blog discusses the production of Henrik Ibsen’s ‘A Doll’s House’ (Michael Meyer translation) by Elysium Theatre Company played on 14th October at Bishop Auckland Town Hall. References to text (not in all precise respects like the production adapted one) from Henrik Ibsen (translated Michael Meyer) [1990: 23 – 104] ‘Plays: Two’.](https://i0.wp.com/livesteven.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/image-17.png?resize=365%2C365&ssl=1)







