The article examines two neglected texts that were produced in the Romantic period and place themselves at the margins of theatre history: the “ill-fated” stage adaptations of King Richard III by Thomas Bridgman and William Charles Macready. Bridgman’s endeavour was never produced: after being rejected by both Drury Lane and Covent Garden Theatre, it was privately printed in 1820; whereas the play traditionally attributed to Macready was brought to the stage just for two nights, in March 1821. Both experiments were born of a growing dissatisfaction with Colley Cibber’s version of the play, which alone could be seen at the theatre at the time. However, their unsuccessful stage history and intrinsic ambiguities bear witness to the sway that C...