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						today is like Medieval War of the Roses, says actor 
						Ralph Fiennes 
			
   
            
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						[July 22, 2016]   
						By Jemima Kelly 
						
						LONDON (Reuters) - British 
						actor Ralph Fiennes has compared the current infighting 
						among British politicians to William Shakespeare's 
						portrayal of England's 15th Century Wars of the Roses in 
						an interview with Reuters. 
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				 Fiennes, the award-winning star of films such as Schindler's 
				List and the English Patient, is for the first time playing King 
				Richard III, whom Shakespeare depicts as a sadistic, crafty 
				hunchback, at London's Almeida Theater. 
				 
				Richard was re-interred last year at Leicester Cathedral in 
				central England, after his remains were found under a car park 
				in the city in 2012. Some 530 years earlier, he had been slain 
				at the Battle of Bosworth Field - the last significant battle of 
				the War of the Roses, a 30-year conflict for the English throne. 
				 
				Fiennes likened Shakespeare's villainous king to the actions of 
				current politician Michael Gove after David Cameron announced 
				last month he would quit as prime minister following the vote to 
				leave the European Union. 
				
				
				  
				Gove was accused of betraying fellow Conservative lawmaker Boris 
				Johnson by withdrawing his support for the ex-London Mayor's 
				leadership bid and announcing his own intention to run for the 
				top job - a position Gove said he had never wanted. 
				 
				"His endless protestations that he was not fit to be leader is 
				classic Richard," Fiennes said. 
			
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			"Whatever side of the political divide you're on, you see that once 
			the head has been cut off, chaos ensues, both in Europe but also in 
			both political parties here, and that's what he (Shakespeare) 
			foreshadows," said the theater's artistic director, Rupert Goold. 
			 
			Fiennes is performing alongside fellow British actor Vanessa 
			Redgrave under the direction of Goold, who has given the play a 
			modern feel: it opens with the 2012 discovery of the king's remains, 
			and features mobile phones. 
			 
			The play will be broadcast live across the world later on Thursday, 
			in a first for the theater. 
			 
			(This story has been refiled to clarify attribution of quote in 
			paragraph seven, edits lead) 
			 
			(Reporting by Sarah Mills, writing by Jemima Kelly; editing by 
			Stephen Addison) 
			  
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