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  1. A Man for All Seasons is a play by Robert Bolt based on the life of Sir Thomas More. An early form of the play had been written for BBC Radio in 1954, and a one-hour live television version starring Bernard Hepton was produced in 1957 by the BBC, but after Bolt's success with The Flowering Cherry, he reworked it for the stage.

  2. Unlike the play's blatant villain Cromwell, the character Richard Rich serves as a more complex antagonist. Like other characters in the play, Rich wants power. However, unlike the members of the court, he doesn't have any wealth or status at the beginning of the play. He waits for an audience with More, eager to obtain a position in court.

  3. The best study guide to A Man for All Seasons on the planet, from the creators of SparkNotes. Get the summaries, analysis, and quotes you need.

  4. Robert Bolts play A Man for All Seasons presents a “hero of the self” whose unwavering integrity collides with King Henry VIII’s egoistic drive to wrench personal salvation and political permanence for the Tudor line from an unwilling, because politically cornered, Pope.

  5. Complete summary of Robert Bolt's A Man for All Seasons. eNotes plot summaries cover all the significant action of A Man for All Seasons.

  6. Most of the audience seeing Robert Bolt's play, A Man For All Seasons would believe it is a factually accurate historical drama. Bolt, however, has made it quite clear in interviews that he did not set out to write a play about Tudor lives and times.

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  8. Parliament passes the Act of Supremacy which establishes Henry’s right to split from the Catholic Church as leader of a separate Church of England, but More will not sign it. Increasingly, people take his silence to mean he does not support the King at all, which is not the case.

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