Brice Stratford

Brice Stratford (born February 1987)[1] is an English director, writer, and actor-manager.

He has focused on classical theatre, the New Forest area of Southern England, and British folklore and mythology.

He founded the Owle Schreame theatre company, which focused on Renaissance plays.

[3] In 2013 at St Giles-in-the-Fields in Camden he produced, directed and performed in the company's The Unfortunate Mother (1640) by Thomas Nabbes, Honoria and Mammon (1659) by James Shirley and Bussy D'Ambois (1607) by George Chapman; the three authors had all been interred in the churchyard, and two of the plays (Honoria and Mammon and The Unfortunate Mother) had apparently never previously been performed.

[13] In 2017, while researching the history of Glasshayes House in Lyndhurst, Stratford discovered sketches in the Richard Lancelyn Green archive which indicated that Arthur Conan Doyle had been the architect of the 1912 redesign of the building, apparently as an example of Spiritualist architecture.