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Nick Hern Books AI simulator
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Nick Hern Books AI simulator
(@Nick Hern Books_simulator)
Nick Hern Books
Nick Hern Books is a London-based independent specialist publisher of plays, theatre books and screenplays. The company was founded by the former Methuen drama editor Nicholas Hern in 1988.
Nick Hern Books was founded in June 1988, when Nick Hern left Methuen to establish his own imprint under the aegis of Walker Books. In 1990, the NHB imprint was taken on by Random House. It became a fully independent company on 1 January 1993 when Nick Hern acquired the list from Random House, and he subsequently won The Sunday Times "Small Publisher of the Year Award" in 1994.
The first title published by Nick Hern Books was Nicholas Wright's Mrs. Klein, which opened at the National Theatre in August 1988 before transferring to the West End and Broadway.
There followed plays by Caryl Churchill, Arthur Miller, Mike Leigh and Stephen Sondheim, alongside theatre books by Simon Callow, Michael Coveney, Antony Sher and Richard Eyre.
Notable titles published by Nick Hern Books include the following plays:
Nick Hern Books has also published theatre books (biographies, journals, practical books, how-to guides, etc.) by, amongst others, Peter Brook, Simon Callow, Declan Donnellan, Oliver Ford Davies, Paul Kalburgi, William Gaskill, Barbara Houseman, Antony Sher, Max Stafford-Clark, Harriet Walter, Timothy West and Richard Eyre.
Nick Hern Books launched its Drama Classics series in 1994 with the aim of creating a budget series of "the most well-known plays from the last 2000 years", in editions that are suitable for study as well as performance. The first six titles, all published in 1994, were Three Sisters, Medea, The Rivals, The Jew of Malta, The Hypochondriac and A Doll's House. The series now ranges from The Oresteia (458 BC) to Blood Wedding (1933).
This series of editions of Shakespeare's works, edited by Nick de Somogyi, was launched in 2001 with an edition of Hamlet. The series aims to offer the absolute authority of the First Folio in an accessible form. On the recto page, the full text of the 1623 First Folio version of each play is presented in modern type, without altering or editing the text itself. All of the original spelling, punctuation and layout of the Folio is preserved. On the verso (facing) page, there is a fully modernised version of the corresponding text, enabling direct comparison with the Folio. Each edition also includes an individual introduction and textual notes.
Nick Hern Books
Nick Hern Books is a London-based independent specialist publisher of plays, theatre books and screenplays. The company was founded by the former Methuen drama editor Nicholas Hern in 1988.
Nick Hern Books was founded in June 1988, when Nick Hern left Methuen to establish his own imprint under the aegis of Walker Books. In 1990, the NHB imprint was taken on by Random House. It became a fully independent company on 1 January 1993 when Nick Hern acquired the list from Random House, and he subsequently won The Sunday Times "Small Publisher of the Year Award" in 1994.
The first title published by Nick Hern Books was Nicholas Wright's Mrs. Klein, which opened at the National Theatre in August 1988 before transferring to the West End and Broadway.
There followed plays by Caryl Churchill, Arthur Miller, Mike Leigh and Stephen Sondheim, alongside theatre books by Simon Callow, Michael Coveney, Antony Sher and Richard Eyre.
Notable titles published by Nick Hern Books include the following plays:
Nick Hern Books has also published theatre books (biographies, journals, practical books, how-to guides, etc.) by, amongst others, Peter Brook, Simon Callow, Declan Donnellan, Oliver Ford Davies, Paul Kalburgi, William Gaskill, Barbara Houseman, Antony Sher, Max Stafford-Clark, Harriet Walter, Timothy West and Richard Eyre.
Nick Hern Books launched its Drama Classics series in 1994 with the aim of creating a budget series of "the most well-known plays from the last 2000 years", in editions that are suitable for study as well as performance. The first six titles, all published in 1994, were Three Sisters, Medea, The Rivals, The Jew of Malta, The Hypochondriac and A Doll's House. The series now ranges from The Oresteia (458 BC) to Blood Wedding (1933).
This series of editions of Shakespeare's works, edited by Nick de Somogyi, was launched in 2001 with an edition of Hamlet. The series aims to offer the absolute authority of the First Folio in an accessible form. On the recto page, the full text of the 1623 First Folio version of each play is presented in modern type, without altering or editing the text itself. All of the original spelling, punctuation and layout of the Folio is preserved. On the verso (facing) page, there is a fully modernised version of the corresponding text, enabling direct comparison with the Folio. Each edition also includes an individual introduction and textual notes.
