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Monthly Archives: April 2012
Julius Caesar: Shakespeare’s African play
In this year of firsts, Greg Doran, who’s about to take over the running of the Royal Shakespeare Company, is creating a few firsts of his own. He’s currently rehearsing the first RSC Shakespeare production featuring a completely black cast. … Continue reading
Shakespeare’s well-apparell’d April
Shakespeare loved spring, and April, with its freshness and optimism is the month of which he writes most fondly. I couldn’t let it go by without a post containing a few of his lines, together with a selection of photographs … Continue reading
Posted in Plays and Poems, Stratford-upon-Avon
Tagged April, May, poetry, spring, Stratford-upon-Avon
4 Comments
Global Shakespeares
The World Shakespeare Festival, which has just begun, is already opening our eyes to performances of Shakespeare from some of the most remote corners of the world. Nothing does more to prove that Shakespeare is the world’s dramatist than productions … Continue reading
Happy Birthday Shakespeare 2012
People all round the world will be celebrating Shakespeare’s birthday today, 23rd April. This year we in the UK welcome productions of Shakespeare’s plays in many languages from all parts of the world as part of the Cultural Olympiad. Even though these … Continue reading
Shakespeare Unlocked with the BBC
In case it had escaped your notice, the World Shakespeare Festival’s about to kick off in theatres around the country. But even if you don’t intend to go anywhere near a theatre, the BBC is providing enough programmes in the … Continue reading
Posted in Legacy
Tagged BBC, British Broadcasting Corporation, Shakespeare Unlocked, World Shakespeare Festival
5 Comments
Picturing Shakespeare: the Boydell Shakespeare Gallery
In November 1786 the printer Josiah Boydell held a dinner at his London home to which he invited several leading artists including George Romney and Benjamin West. The discussion turned to the idea of creating a lavishly illustrated edition of Shakespeare’s … Continue reading
Posted in Legacy, Stratford-upon-Avon
Tagged Boydell Shakespeare Gallery, Fuseli, John Boydell, Josiah Boydell, New Place, Remembering Shakespeare, statue, Thomas Banks, Yale
1 Comment
Shakespeare’s horses: nags, jades and steeds, or wonders of nature
I’m no great lover of any sport involving animals, but I do admire the beauty of those superbly athletic thoroughbred horses. It was shocking to hear that two horses had died during the running of last weekend’s Grand National, one … Continue reading
Shakespeare’s sisters
We’re used to the idea that in the early modern period women were seen as intellectually inferior to men. Denied the educational opportunities afforded to their brothers, girls learned only the rudiments of reading and writing. And with their lives … Continue reading
Mozart, Shakespeare and genius
Maybe it’s because I’ve been away from the BBC for two weeks, but the Radio 4 documentary by Dr Robert Winston about Mozart, broadcast a couple of days ago, struck me as a fascinating mix of analysis and glorious music. … Continue reading
Posted in Legacy
Tagged Beethoven, Ben Jonson, genius, Jane Glover, Mozart, music, Robert Winston, Shakespeare
1 Comment