THE UNKNOWN WITCH
An adaptation of Gloriana, The Virgin Queen. This is a secret that was never meant to be revealed. In a world haunted by fear, prophecy, and power, THE UNKNOWN WITCH imagines a hidden collaboration between William Shakespeare and Elizabeth I.
Blending live performance with cinematic digital imagery, the production creates a striking theatrical experience where the boundaries between stage and screen dissolve. Two performers embody Shakespeare and Elizabeth, giving voice to an entire cast of characters, seen and unseen, through layered performance and sound.
The witches, ghosts, and prophetic elements associated with the Shakespearean canon are framed as products of imagination, cultural anxiety, and theatrical invention, mirroring the way audiences of the time might interpret them as something more.
As suspicion and fear spread within the world of the play, the story highlights the consequences of irrational belief: censorship, persecution, and the suppression of creative expression. Through humor, irony, and theatricality, THE UNKNOWN WITCH ultimately positions superstition itself, not the supernatural, as the true source of danger.
Music pulses through the story, from lyrical verse to haunting, ritual-driven chants, echoing the emotional force and poetic rhythm of the Shakespearean canon.
Witches, spirits, and prophecy emerge not as simple superstition, but as the creative fire of an age gripped by fear and imagination. And at its core lies a provocative question: What if the mystery of Shakespeare is not meant to be solved, but performed?