Museums at Night at Fulham Palace!

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Perhaps Fulham Palace seems like an odd to location to have a drama student on placement, yet every day I meet new ways to use and develop my skills. Since I began here, I have been working on creating a character to perform for the exciting Museums At Night event, on the 26th October.

Every drama student is familiar with the process of creating characters from scratch, but I have never developed a character in quite the same way as I have at Fulham Palace. I began by researching the history of the Palace, sorting through the site’s wealth of history, until I had shortlisted a variety of incredible stories from the Tudor Palace. For example, Catherine of Aragon (the incredible, empowering woman, unfortunately only remembered as Henry VIII’s first wife) lived at the Palace for a while; Protestants had their ‘loyalties tested’ (read: ‘were tortured’) by ‘Bloody’ Bishop Bonner in the Great Hall; and Bishop Ridley’s kindness was betrayed, leaving him to be burned at the stake. With so much history to investigate, the research process was a rabbit hole, down which I would get lost for hours.

Margaret Bonner (Bishop Bonner’s sister) piqued my interest: this 16th Century woman was essentially unrecorded, although we know she lived here under both a Catholic and a Protestant Bishop. As a dramatist, I was eager to uncover this shrouded character, and explore some of the incredible things this silent voice would have seen during the Reformation period at the Palace.

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Once certain of the character, I considered captivating ways to present the story I had found. I am a fan of puppetry: I love that even adults are mesmerised by inanimate objects manipulated into life, and having recently attended the Natural History Museum’s foray into puppetry (The Wider Earth), it seemed puppetry could be a fascinating medium to reveal the secrets Margaret saw.

For Museums at Night, Margaret Bonner will come to life. Stepping out from her blurry background, she will recount the visit of the infamous sorcerer Dr. John Dee, illustrated by a hand-crafted wooden puppet.

Join us for this re-imagining of Tudor life at Fulham Palace, where you will meet Tudor characters; make a personalised, authentic Tudor bath-bomb; watch live performances; and follow cryptic clues around the Palace to find stolen treasure!

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26th October, 6:30pm-10pm, tickets £15.50, available here: http://www.fulhampalace.org/museums-at-night/

Chloe Phillips-Bartlett, Learning Volunteer