Back in 1996, Al Pacino made a documentary centered on the title character from one of William Shakespeare's most wrenching and unforgettable plays. Pacino called it "Looking for Richard." Maybe he was looking in the wrong place. Who would've guessed
I like the idea of the hunchbacked Richard III, newly exhumed from his final resting spot beneath a parking lot in Leicester, England, visiting the Oval Office. You can imagine the late, unlamented English monarch exchanging pleasantries with President
Is it just my imagination or do I detect a faint grin of belated (about half a millennium belated) satisfaction playing about the long-jawed skull of Richard III? Because when it came to reinterments, he was a stickler for doing the right thing. In
Slain more than 500 years ago on a British battlefield, King Richard III was recently determined to have been unceremoniously buried in nearby Leicester without a coffin. Now that his bones have been identified after being
Two days after we found out that the long lost bones of Richard III were found in a parking lot, 528 years after his death, we can now 'meet' him. Or, more precisely, we can tak
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