William Blake and creativity in science and the arts

The title page of Songs of Innocence, 1789

The title page of Songs of Innocence, 1789

What is creativity and where does it come from? Is there a place for creativity in science?

Shakespeare was one of the most creative of people, but the mysteries of his talent are impossible to pin down. William Blake, (1757-1827) was hugely creative, but his wild visions and strange visual style classed him as eccentric if not actually lunatic. But whether or not you are drawn to his poetic and artistic creations, he was a brilliantly skilled and innovative craftsman.

The Ashmolean Museum’s current exhibition, William Blake, Apprentice and Master, reviewed on the Wordworth Trust’s blog here, focuses on his long apprenticeship as an engraver, his early work and technical skills. Blake could have had a perfectly respectable career as an engraver had he followed the conventional route, but he developed a whole new method of engraving and printing. This enabled him to retain control over the whole process of creating books from the first sketch to finished object in which poetry and images appeared in colour on the same page.

It can be hard to fathom Blake’s mind through his images and poems, so the approach of the exhibition, looking at processes as well as ideas, offers a way into his thinking. It contains a mock-up of his studio, complete with press, to show him as a practical craftsman, not just a man with his head in the clouds. He didn’t care that his methods were too expensive and difficult to be commercially viable, rejecting, as did others in the Romantic movement, the idea that making money was important.

Blake's image of Pity

Blake’s image of Pity

All creative people take inspiration from the work of others. It’s certainly true of Shakespeare, and Blake was inspired by poetic images such as Pity, based on Macbeth’s consideration of act of murder:
And pity, like a naked new-born babe,
Striding the blast, or heaven’s cherubim, horsed
Upon the sightless couriers of the air,
Shall blow the horrid deed in every eye,
That tears shall drown the wind.

The great imaginative writer Philip Pullman, author of the Northern Lights trilogy, is President of the Blake Society, and wrote a brilliant piece about Blake to coincide with the Ashmolean exhibition. He describes Auguries of Innocence as “one of the greatest political poems in the language, for the way it insists on the right to life and freedom without qualification, uniting large things and small, and shows the moral connections between them”. It contains unmistakeable echoes of Shakespeare’s King Lear. These lines are from the beginning of the poem:
To see a World in a Grain of Sand
And a Heaven in a Wild Flower
Hold Infinity in the palm of your hand
And Eternity in an hour
A Robin Red breast in a Cage
Puts all Heaven in a Rage
A dog starv’d at his Master’s Gate
Predicts the ruin of the State
He who shall hurt the little Wren
Shall never be belov’d by Men
The wanton Boy that kills the Fly
Shall feel the Spiders enmity

You can’t help hearing Lear’s “As flies to wanton boys are we to th’ gods./They kill us for their sport”, but here too are “mine enemy’s dog”  and the little wren, all mentioned towards the end of the play.  Pullman’s essay is a plea for the imagination, vision, and energy. “We need to be able to see contrary things and believe them both true…, despite the scorn of rationalists whose single vision rejects anything that is not logically coherent”.  “No symphony, no painting, no poem, no art at all was ever reasoned into existence.”

Urizen creating the world

Urizen creating the world

Hating war, Blake called Science “the Tree of Death”, and his visions were often apocalyptic. Artists and scientists have often seemed to have little to say to each other, but there is common ground. Recently we have seen less of the Dr Strangelove “mad scientist” and more people with normal though troubled lives. On film, Eddie Redmayne has played Stephen Hawking in The Theory of Everything, and Benedict Cumberbatch has played Alan Turing in The Imitation Game, and currently on stage John Heffernan plays J Robert Oppenheimer “the father of the atom bomb”. Oppenheimer focuses on the excitement of shared discovery and ends as Oppenheimer’s tragedy.

BBC Radio 4’s Start the Week on 26 January was a terrific discussion between scientists and artists on Organising the Mind. Apart from the “Eureka” moment, scientists tend to play down the importance of creativity in favour of logic and proof. But the “primordial soup” of ideas from which poet Frances Leviston’s poetry emerges during a period of intense concentration was agreed to be not so different from the way in which scientists develop theories. Mozart and Shakespeare were both cited as people whose creativity was supported by the rules and boundaries within which they worked, as did Blake, and as do scientists.

Frances Leviston talked how she prepares to write a poem, doing research but not in an organised way, and while detail can be interesting “I can’t be inhibited by the truth”. The author of Oppenheimer, Tom Morton-Smith, researched the science, but is not a scientist and admitted in discussion that it was good not to know too much, as “anything that’s interesting and enlightening to me will probably also be interesting and enlightening for the audience”, a thought for anyone contemplating how Shakespeare might have known so much about law, the sea and so on.

Advertisement for Oppenheimer

Advertisement for Oppenheimer

The radio programme is there to be listened to for months, but Oppenheimer is almost completely sold out until the end of its run on 7 March. The Blake exhibition closes on 1 March.

Blake’s visions continue to influence our imaginations and our understanding of science. The image now being used to promote Oppenheimer is a direct take on Blake’s famous vision of Urizen creating the Universe.

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Stratford-upon-Avon projects 2016: a new collaboration

The Courtyard Theatre, formerly The Other Place

The Courtyard Theatre, formerly The Other Place

Earlier in the week I wrote about some of the projects in Stratford-upon-Avon timed for completion at the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare’s death in April 2016. The Royal Shakespeare Company and Birmingham University have also announced a five-year collaboration centred on The Other Place.

People whose memories of the RSC go back a decade or more will be delighted to hear that the RSC’s Studio Theatre is to be reinstated. The new 200-seat flexible theatre will be built within the shell of the Courtyard Theatre, along with two new rehearsal rooms and a home for the Company’s Costume Store. The auditorium will be used for festivals as well as providing space for community and local groups.

Samuel West as Richard II

Samuel West as Richard II

It can’t be the same as the original 1970s Other Place or even the 1990s replacement, but hopefully it will retain something of the spirit of the old theatres. The Courtyard Theatre itself, built as a temporary home during the rebuilding of the Royal Shakespeare Theatre, played host to a number of distinguished productions including the full History Cycle in 2006-7, the David Tennant Hamlet, Ian McKellen’s King Lear, Tony Sher’s Tempest and the original production of Matilda. This temporary building proved to be, in Michael Billington’s words “a bit of a smasher”. Quite an achievement for a building that was only in regular use for 5 years.

The original Other Place had an extraordinary history: there audiences could see the same actors who were playing on the main stage one night close-up the next, often in completely different roles. Harriet Walter played Viola on the big stage, Imogen in Cymbeline at TOP, Michael Gambon played King Lear and Antony, among many examples. Great performances continued in the second Other Place, and whenever I’m there I still think of Sam West’s Richard II in the late Stephen Pimlott’s brilliant 2001 production.

The RSC are also beginning a five-year collaboration with the University of Birmingham that sounds really exciting, and hopefully not just for those directly involved. “The collaboration, which sees the University become a Founding Partner of The Other Place, is rooted in the vision of the theatre as a centre for creative and academic exchange. Benefits for the University will include the opportunity for students to access creative and teaching spaces at The Other Place, with RSC artists and practitioners providing input to undergraduate and postgraduate courses, while the RSC will have the chance to work closely with internationally renowned academics at the Shakespeare Institute.”

The Shakespeare Institute, Stratford-upon-Avon

The Shakespeare Institute, Stratford-upon-Avon

Here’s Professor Michael Dobson, Director of the Shakespeare Institute: ‘One reason the University of Birmingham established its Shakespeare Institute in Stratford in 1951 was so that it could both benefit from the presence of a great classical theatre company and contribute to that company’s work. More than 60 years on, we are thrilled that this collaboration, centred on the RSC’s ideas department, The Other Place, is being reborn in a form that will bring renewed creativity to the theatre and to the academy alike.’

Professor Ewan Fernie, Chair of Shakespeare Studies and Fellow at the Shakespeare Institute, said: ‘We at the University of Birmingham’s Shakespeare Institute share the RSC’s passion for making The Other Place a driver for alternative ways of doing Shakespeare and contemporary art, and we’re passionate about sharing that with our students as well.

‘Everyone involved with this project is keen for The Other Place to be a unique hub for creative and academic exchange that will make a fresh and lasting contribution to cultural life in the UK and beyond.’

The RSC have also just announced their autumn and winter season. It will feature Gregory Doran’s production of Henry V that will coincide with the 600th anniversary of the Battle of Agincourt, while Euripides’ great play Hecuba will play at the Swan. Still remembering World War 1, the two plays “provide very different perspectives on war, essentially from a male and female point of view”. And it’s been announced that in the summer of 2016 Antony Sher will play King Lear. It’s the most fitting play for the anniversary of Shakespeare’s death and is seen as a companion piece to Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman opening at the RST soon. Public booking for the 2015-6 Winter season will open in a few weeks.

The final proposal for Stratford in 2016 is a new statue of Shakespeare which may stand at the top of Bridge Street. Personally I’d find a quieter spot: people are sure to want to get close to it and it will be on the traffic island at the town’s busiest junction. It could also be said that Stratford is not short of public sculptures of Shakespeare, most of which are not terribly well looked-after. Pigeons find his bald head irresistible, with the inevitable consequences, and nobody ever seems to give the poor chap a wash.

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“Let me see your archery”: from deadly conflict to courtly leisure

The French Princess and her ladies, Love's Labour's Lost, London 1936. Photo from the V&A

The French Princess and her ladies, Love’s Labour’s Lost, London 1936. Photo from the V&A

More than one scene in the TV series Wolf Hall has shown gentlemen and ladies of the court of Henry VIII practicing archery as a pastime. And in Shakespeare’s Love’s Labour’s Lost the Princess of France and her ladies take aim with their bows as part of a deer hunt, incidentally reminding us of that mischievous mythological archer, Cupid. Archery had become a symbol of genteel love rather than an essential skill for fighting.

A couple of centuries before, English archers had been renowned: they were responsible for important victories against the French, particularly the Battle of Crecy in 1346 and the Battle of Agincourt in 1415, the decisive battle in Shakespeare’s Henry V. Shakespeare understood that archers were usually kept separate from the main battle. In Henry VI Part 1, Talbot:
wanted pikes to set before his archers;
Instead whereof sharp stakes pluck’d out of hedges
They pitched in the ground confusedly,
To keep the horsemen off from breaking in.

On 3 February the BBC screened The Mary Rose: a Timewatch guide (available on Iplayer). The programme examined the history of the raising of Henry VIII’s flagship that sank at Portsmouth in 1545. The wreck has provided many surprises, including 137 intact longbows and 3,500 arrows. Before this discovery only five longbows survived. The programme showed the investigations into how the bows work, testing some of them to destruction. They now think that the draw weight could have been up to 160lbs, as opposed to 60 lbs for a modern bow.

The face of the archer found on the Mary Rose

The face of the archer found on the Mary Rose

The men on the Mary Rose were elite soldiers. “The skeleton of an archer reveals he was in his early 20s and 178cm (5ft 10in). He was taller than many of the crew and well built, with strong legs. The middle of his spine is twisted, making one shoulder lower than the other – a feature is seen on other skeletons found with archery equipment. One of his right finger bones has grooves on the inside, forming a ridge. This could have been made by repeatedly pulling a longbow string. He was wearing a leather jerkin and a longbow was found nearby.” A reconstruction has been made of his face based on his skull, and more information is here.

The Mary Rose’s archer had spent years developing his skills and strength, but  everybody was supposed to be useful with a bow. Even in Shakespeare’s time the populace were to follow directions like this from 1363: “that every man in the same country, if he be able-bodied, shall, upon holidays, make use, in his games, of bows and arrows… and so learn and practise archery.”

In his Survey of London, published at the end of Elizabeth’s reign, John Stow gives a history of the city of London and its suburbs. He is not pleased that in 1498 at Moorgate, north of the city walls, gardens were destroyed “and out of them made a plain field for archers to shoot in”. By 1570 the Worshipful Company of Bowyers, originally the medieval Bowyers’ Company, was in decline, styling themselves “the “decayed Companies of Bowyers and Fletchers, Stringers and Arrowhead makers”. They petitioned Lord Burleigh who in the same year supported them by granting a commission for the “maintenance and exercise of shooting in the longbow and the debarring of unlawful games”.

King Charles 1 shooting in Finsbury Fields

King Charles 1 shooting in Finsbury Fields

The Company’s website contains lots of information about the history of archery, including an extraordinary map dated 1594 of the area around Finsbury that shows the 194 permanent archery marks or targets in use in the area.

Stow also notes that just nearby, the area which had once been “inhabited, for the most part, by bowyers, fletchers, bow-string makers, and such like occupations, now little occupied; archery giving place to a number of bowling-alleys and dicing-houses.”

This part of London was well known to Shakespeare. The Theatre and the Curtain,  where he first worked, were both further north and beyond the city’s jurisdiction Shoreditch was dodgy and dangerous. The Moorfields area by contrast seems to have been marshy land unsuitable for buildings, but could be turned into productive or pleasant gardens.

Archery was practised all over the country. Alison Plowden, in her book Elizabethan England, notes that “archery …was still, in theory at least, compulsory for all able-bodied Englishmen between the ages of 17 and 60, and the inhabitants of every town were supposed to maintain the butts, or practice ground”.

Shakespeare would have learned to use a bow and arrow himself. In Stratford there was an area known as “The Butts”, marshy unproductive land near to Clopton Bridge, where men would practice archery. Nick Fogg, in his book about Stratford, notes that a document dated 1617, just after Shakespeare’s death, records a ditch being dug to enclose Butt Close. But as Alison Plowden says, in reality “the age of the long-bow was passing into history, and by Elizabethan times archery had become little more than just another leisure activity” suitable for Shakespeare’s princess and her ladies.

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Celebrating 2016 in Stratford-upon-Avon: preparations begin

Big School at KES

Big School at KES

2016 will be the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare’s death, and preparations are well under way to celebrate in the town where he was born and died. Projects are afoot everywhere, and I’m going to write a couple of posts giving up to date information about them.

The first project, and I think the most exciting, is that being led by King Edward VI School,  where Shakespeare almost certainly received his education. The project, ‘Shakespeare’s Schoolroom and Guildhall’ has been well-received, and the School is preparing its full bid to be submitted in March.

The press release explains: “The Guildhall, described by historian and broadcaster, Michael Wood, as ‘one of the most atmospheric, magical and important buildings in the whole of Britain’, was built in 1418-20 and is famous as the place where William Shakespeare was educated and where he first witnessed professional theatre. It served as the centre of civic life and governance in Stratford for over 400 years and was the building in which Shakespeare’s father, John, served as the town’s bailiff. Shakespeare’s Schoolroom, on the upper floor, is still used to teach students at King Edward VI School today.”

The Guildhall as it was in 1830

The Guildhall as it was in 1830

The upper part of the building, known as Big School, is still used for lessons today. But below it on the ground floor of the building, the Guild Hall (or Feast Hall) and the adjoining Agreeing Room, are to be restored and opened. A great stride was taken a couple of years ago when the ground floor rooms, which had for many years housed the school’s library, were emptied, allowing them to be seen properly. Both these and the adjoining medieval Guild Chapel indicate that Stratford was a town of some substance. In the 1550s, the Guild was dissolved and replaced by a Town Council that continued to govern the town, holding its monthly meetings in these rooms. The schoolroom above was added at about the same time.

The Headmaster, Bennet Carr, explains the aims of the project: “This is a building of global significance yet the last major restoration of the building took place in 1891 and it is now in urgent need of repair and conservation. Our £1m project will restore the Guildhall and enable us to share this wonderful building with the Stratford community and the thousands of tourists who visit Stratford each year.”

There will be two great opportunities in the next few days for the public to see the plans to restore and open the Guildhall on Tuesday 10th February from 2.00pm to 4.00pm and Saturday 14th February from 12 noon until 2.00pm.

Another of the School’s projects currently in the news is Edward’s Boys, a troupe of boy actors who specialise in rarely-performed plays originally written for the boys’ companies. They have attracted much academic attention and have just released tickets for their latest production The Lady’s Trial, by John Ford. A collaboration with Globe Education, performances will be in Oxford on 12 March, Walsall 13 March, and Stratford-upon-Avon 14-15 March. Apparently tickets are going fast, so see the Edward’s Boys site for information.

If you’re in town to see the KES plans you could have a look to see what’s going on just across the road from the Guild buildings on the site of the house in which Shakespeare died. This is sure to be at the centre of much attention in 2016. The Shakespeare Birthplace Trust explains “Now the site of Shakespeare’s New Place, his last home, is set to become a major new landmark attraction, thanks to a confirmed grant of £1,815,400 from the Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF)”.

The model for the site of New Place

The model for the site of New Place

“The Shakespeare Birthplace Trust aims to re-imagine the internationally significant site, creating a place where visitors can discover the story of Shakespeare at the height of his success as a writer and prominent citizen of his home town. The project will also be a catalyst for involving the communities of Stratford and the wider Midlands region with the world-famous heritage on their doorstep”.  Work is due to start in March 2015, and Shakespeare’s New Place is scheduled to open for the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare’s death on 23rd April 2016.

The project will include a new entrance, landscaping, a deep illuminated pool and new artworks and displays. As you can see from the illustration the design is contemporary, a bold choice for this sensitive part of the town. I find the design rather stark as a memorial to a man whose love of the natural world was so strong, but at least the knot garden, which has been there for around a hundred years, and the Great Garden containing its historic mulberry tree, will remain.

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Shakespeare onstage 2015

Benedict Cumberbatch

Benedict Cumberbatch

In the last couple of weeks lots of announcements for Shakespeare productions in the UK  in 2015 have been made, and booking opened. This post contains links to just some of what’s going to be on offer this year.

It’s already too late to get a ticket for the Benedict Cumberbatch Hamlet at the Barbican, but one friend who spent four hours online to get her tickets told me there will be releasing additional seats for each performance, and there is always the hope of returns. It will run from 5 August to the end of October, and details of how to get the 100 seats being released every day will be given on the production’s website.

Public booking for Shakespeare’s Globe’s 2015 season opens on 9 February. There’s a feast of Shakespeare on offer beginning with The Merchant of Venice, Romeo and Juliet, As You Like It, King John, Measure for Measure, Richard II, Richard III, Much Ado About Nothing and Macbeth. The highlight of the season is likely to be Jonathan Pryce’s performance as Shylock from 23 April to 7 June.

Hugh Quarshie

Hugh Quarshie

At the Royal Shakespeare Company in Stratford, in the main theatre there will be productions of The Merchant of Venice and Othello,  hotly-anticipated with Hugh Quarshie in the leading role and Lucian Msamati as Iago. There has already been much media interest, and here’s an interview given by Lucian Msamati for the Guardian.

On 26 July a version of A Midsummer Night’s Dream produced in collaboration with Garsington Opera will be staged, with Mendelssohn’s music performed live.

Over at the Swan there will be work by Shakespeare’s contemporaries, Marlowe’s Jew of Malta, John Ford’s Love’s Sacrifice and Ben Jonson’s Volpone. There will also be a First Encounters production for young audiences, a conflation of the Henry IV and Henry V plays under the title of The Famous Victories of Henry V. This will receive two performances at the Swan on 5 June to be followed by a tour.

Kenneth Branagh as Macbeth, 2013-4

Kenneth Branagh as Macbeth, 2013-4

Later on, in the autumn, Kenneth Branagh is to put on a three-month residency of Shakespeare plays at the Garrick Theatre in the West End. The Winter’s Tale is the only play confirmed so far, running from October. This is great news, following Branagh’s internationally-acclaimed  production of Macbeth in 2013-4.

Many of you will have heard that Brian Blessed was forced to retire from the production of King Lear in which he was starring. He collapsed during one performance, and has now been given medical advice to not complete the run. Lear is a long and physically-demanding role, and hopefully this will not signal the end of the indefatigable 78-year-old’s stage career. The play continues at Holy Trinity Church Guildford with Terence Wilton in the lead until 14 February: please give the Guildford Shakespeare Company your support.

For those of you unable to get to these, there are many onscreen offerings. I should first mention the screening of the Maxine Peake Hamlet which was such an onstage success in 2014. It receives a screening in cinemas as part of Picturehouse Entertainment on 23 and 28  March 2015. This is the trailer for the show.

Globe Onscreen will feature the non-Shakespearean tragedy The Duchess of Malfi by John Webster on 9 March, followed by Titus Andronicus on 9 April, Julius Caesar on 30 April, Antony and Cleopatra in June and The Comedy of Errors later in the summer. None of these are live relays but encore performances from earlier years.

The RSC’s Live from Stratford-upon-Avon screenings will include Love’s Labour’s Lost on 11 February and Love’s Labour’s Won (Much Ado About Nothing) on 4 March. In June their production of The Merchant of Venice will also be live streamed on 22 July and that new production of Othello on 26 August.

For ballet lovers the Bolshoi Ballet’s 2013 Romeo and Juliet will receive an Encore showing on 8 March.

This list is selective: you’ll find a much more comprehensive list of Shakespeare productions in the UK at the University of Birmingham’s Touchstone site.

Having written a couple of weeks ago about how bleak the offerings were for Shakespeare-lovers it now seems we will be spoilt for choice in 2015. Start making your plans now.

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The mystery of Mr W H

Shakespeares Sonnets title page 1609

Shakespeares Sonnets title page 1609

The headline read: Has the mystery of Shakespeare’s sonnets finally been solved?” My thought was – which one?

The sonnets are puzzling in many ways. Do they tell  a real story, or are they purely fictional? What order were they written in? Who if anybody inspired the fair youth, the dark lady and the rival poet, supposed characters in the story of the sonnets? When were the poems written? Do they reveal Shakespeare as a homosexual?

Apart from all the mysteries about the poems themselves, there remain question marks over the publication. Francis Meres’ mention in 1598 of “his sugred Sonnets among his private friends” implies that Shakespeare didn’t want them published, but that was 11 years before they appeared on the bookstalls in 1609. How did they come to be published?

All these questions, and the constant flood of publications claiming to have “solved the mystery” have made me want to cry “Hold, enough!”

Shakespeares Sonnets dedication page

Shakespeares Sonnets dedication page

But then my attention was grabbed by the article with the headline quoted at the start of this post. And the mystery referred to is the identification of “Mr W H” who is mentioned on the deliberately cryptic dedication page by the book’s publisher Thomas Thorpe. The dedication reads: “To the only begetter of these insuing sonnets Mr WH. All happinesse and that eternitie promised by our ever-living poet wisheth the well-wishing adventurer in setting forth. TT [Thorpe].”

Many possibilities have been suggested for Mr W H, the two best-known being Shakespeare’s patron Henry Wriothesley, Earl of Southampton to whom Shakespeare dedicated his long narrative poems Venus and Adonis and The Rape of Lucrece, and William Herbert, Earl of Pembroke, to whom the posthumously-published First Folio was dedicated. It’s even been suggested that WH might be a misprint for WS, Shakespeare himself.

The new candidate is hitherto-unknown publisher William Holme who died in 1607, two years before the publication of the sonnets. According to the article, ” Geoffrey Caveney, an American researcher, has unearthed possible evidence to link the initials with William Holme, who had both personal and professional connections to Thorpe. Both came from prominent Chester families, were publishing apprentices in 1580s London and had strong connections with theatres through publishing major playwrights such as Ben Jonson and George Chapman.”

The implication is that WH somehow gained possession of the sonnets and on his death they were passed to Thorpe. I was under the impression that Elizabethan and Jacobean publishers had been quite thoroughly-researched so I was surprised that Holme’s name has not come up before, having the right initials.

The clues seem to have been there:” Caveney also finds Holme interesting because he published major playwrights of the day, including Jonson’s Every Man out of His Humour in 1600, and Chapman’s Monsieur D’Olive in 1606. Caveney’s research shows that Holme had a London bookshop and was a close colleague of the printer Adam Islip, who printed Every Man out of His Humour and worked with George Eld, who printed the Sonnets for Thorpe.”

To me what makes this a possibility worth considering is that Holme was a publisher, a colleague and perhaps friend of Thorpe. The tone of the dedication is familiar, and as Geoffrey Caveney points out Thorpe would never have addressed noblemen as plain Mr, or indeed with such informality. Eminent Shakespearean Professor Stanley Wells is interviewed in the article and also seems to find it worth pursuing, describing it as “better than any other suggestion so far”.

It has been suggested that the dedication deliberately conceals the truth about the sonnets, but maybe it wasn’t so obscure as we think it is. While the now-obsolete word “begetter” is usually used in regard to procreation, it was also used figuratively to indicate someone who originates something, or makes it come into being. And if the word refers to the edition rather than the poems themselves it makes sense.

The line about happiness and eternity is more difficult. Does it imply Mr W H is alive, or dead? Are the poems, that will live forever, to convey immortality on the author, the subject, or the person who procured the manuscript for publication? I’ve read that the phrase “setting forth”, though, was used to mean “published”, making it an appropriate phrase to be used by one publisher when writing about another.

Still lots of questions, and Caveney’s essay is unlikely to be the last word on this intriguing subject. The newspaper article contains a lot more information, and the full essay is going to be published in the February 2015 edition of the Notes and Queries journal.

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Michael Wood and “Mary Arden: a Tudor Life”

Michael Wood

Michael Wood

The BBC’s serialisation of Hilary Mantel’s novels Wolf Hall and Bring Up the Bodies is proving grippingly good. To complement these programmes about “the glittering –though at times terrifying- world of the Tudor court” a new documentary on more ordinary people is being shown on BBC4 on Thursday 12 February: it “tells the story of a woman touched by new opportunities in society, work and education, in a century that saw the birth of England’s cultural and economic greatness.” Made by renowned TV historian Michael Wood it’s entitled Mary Arden: a Tudor Life. Mary Arden was “the daughter of a 100-acre farmer in a small village in Warwickshire. Mary had eight children, three of whom died young, and went through many family disasters and tragedies. But what makes Mary’s life especially fascinating is that one of her sons was William Shakespeare.”

Mary’s life “spanned one of most dramatic periods of change in our history: her childhood during the last years of Henry VIII; her youth under Mary Tudor, in the last days of Catholic England, and her married life through the reign of Elizabeth, to her death under James I – by which time her son William was a well-off royal servant and the most famous poet of the age.” The programme will ask “what role a Tudor woman had, working on the farm with her father, and then in business with her husband; whether she could read and write; how she brought up her children; the stories she told, and the beliefs she passed down in an age of religious persecution; and how the political battles of the Elizabethan state could touch even an ordinary family.”

Michael Wood has taken an interest in Mary Arden since at least 2001 when he filmed his biographical series “Searching for Shakespeare” (released on DVD). At the time he aimed to “reveal a man who is the product of his time – a period of tremendous upheaval that straddled the medieval and modern worlds”.

In his book of the series, Michael Wood explained: “The story of a person’s life begins before he or she is born. It is our family that shapes our values and our ways of seeing, that gives us our deepest fund of tales and images: stories at our mother’s knee; our observations of the way the family works; the relationship between our parents”.  William Shakespeare “came from farming stock: old families rooted in the Warwickshire countryside”.

Mary Arden's Farm, once known as Glebe Farm

Mary Arden’s Farm, once known as Glebe Farm

I’ve recently seen Mary’s father Robert described as a “peasant farmer”, but this is far from the case. My husband, Richard Morris, was for many years Chief Guide at Mary Arden’s House, in Wilmcote and he has supplied me with the following information. Professor Christopher Dyer wroteWe know that Robert Arden, Mary Arden’s father, was already a person of some substance when he paid 6s 8d to join the Stratford Guild in 1517”, and in 1538 “Robert was playing a prominent role in the religious fraternity at Aston Cantlow, which would suggest an important person in village society”.

Robert Arden farmed 150 acres of land in Wilmcote owned by Lord Abergavenny and owned farmland in the village of Snitterfield which was rented by the Shakespeares. This is probably how John Shakespeare got to know Mary.

The known facts about Mary Arden’s life are few: it’s thought she was born between 1536 and 1538, just the time of the Dissolution of the Monasteries, and when each parish was instructed to acquire a copy of the Bible in English. It’s going to be interesting to see what evidence Michael Wood is going to give us about the education of a typical woman of her time.

We know quite a lot about Robert Arden’s finances because he made a will, and the inventory of his goods survives. Mary was named as his executrix. It shows him to be relatively affluent, as well as showing how his house was furnished. Michael Wood notes that the objects mentioned in the 1556 inventory were absorbed into Shakespeare’s vocabulary: “Not only the cloths on the wall, with their frightening and fascinating images, but the skillets, iron crows, pails, mattocks, cauldrons, augers, querns, handsaws, joint stools, cupboards, benches, bolsters, pillows and diapers – words that all appear in his plays”.

Palmer's Farm, once known as Mary Arden's House

Palmer’s Farm, once known as Mary Arden’s House

The house that was the subject of the inventory still stands, and from 14 March 2015 will be open for the summer.  In the late 1990s the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust commissioned a number of reports on the documentary and physical evidence for the house. The results were received just before Michael Wood came to film. The investigations showed that the house previously known as Glebe Farm, 50 yards along the road, was actually Robert Arden’s house and the one traditionally known as Mary Arden’s House was a later building owned by Adam Palmer. Self-appointed local historian John Jordan had made the mistake in the eighteenth century. By an amazing coincidence the SBT had acquired Glebe Farm to prevent development of the site, but it was the wonderfully-atmospheric Palmers Farm that Michael Wood used for his filming. If you’d like to read up, here’s a link to an article about Shakespeare written by Michael Wood.

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Richard III’s final journey

Richard III

Richard III

It’s almost two years since it was announced live on national TV that the skeleton discovered under a car park in Leicester was indeed that of King Richard III, killed at the Battle of Bosworth in 1485. I watched the whole of the press conference at which a series of experts gave their evidence. It is one of the most exciting of recent stories relating to any period of history, and has been a triumph for academics from a number of disciplines including archaeology, forensic science and DNA analysis. It’s unusual for medieval historians and scientists to receive so much public attention but this “missing persons case” combines our love of detective stories with the fascination with Richard III himself.

In December 2014 additional information was released based on the DNA analysis.  This page includes links to a 12-minute video summarising the findings and a one-hour podcast including a discussion between some of those most intimately involved.

Last year the University of Leicester, which had carried out the investigation, put together a MOOC (a free online course) on the subject of England in the time of Richard III, which is now being re-run by FutureLearn.  Deirdre O’Sullivan, Lecturer in Medieval Archaeology at the University, who is in charge of the course, explains “To mark these new events in Richard’s story, we have updated the course to reflect the latest research… The next run of the course starts on 16 February, and most excitingly, during the final week of the course Richard III will be reinterred within Leicester Cathedral. I will be attending the burial service [on Thursday 26 March 2015] and I’ve managed to get exclusive interviews with the Dean and others involved: plus you’ll be able to follow events live, as they build up to the service within the Cathedral.”

All the information you might want to know about the reinterral can be found here. The DNA analysis suggests that Richard had fair hair and blue eyes, and although the evidence that the skeleton is Richard III’s is overwhelming, the video and podcast explain that there are breaks in the DNA chain, “a false-paternity event”, which questions the legitimacy of perhaps the Plantagenet or Tudor monarchs.

Here’s a link to the full journal article published in Nature Communications, and this is the abstract:
In 2012, a skeleton was excavated at the presumed site of the Grey Friars friary in Leicester, the last-known resting place of King Richard III. Archaeological, osteological and radiocarbon dating data were consistent with these being his remains. Here we report DNA analyses of both the skeletal remains and living relatives of Richard III. We find a perfect mitochondrial DNA match between the sequence obtained from the remains and one living relative, and a single-base substitution when compared with a second relative. Y-chromosome haplotypes from male-line relatives and the remains do not match, which could be attributed to a false-paternity event occurring in any of the intervening generations. DNA-predicted hair and eye colour are consistent with Richard’s appearance in an early portrait. We calculate likelihood ratios for the non-genetic and genetic data separately, and combined, and conclude that the evidence for the remains being those of Richard III is overwhelming.

shakespeare and the remains of richard 3Like it or not, the huge interest in Richard III would not be so great without Shakespeare’s great play and its exciting protagonist. Philip Schwyzer’s book Shakespeare and the remains of Richard III was published in 2013 and is about to be released in paperback. It too looks at the subject from a variety of viewpoints, considering where Shakespeare found his information, the intellectual history of the period, and the discoveries in Leicester. According to the publishers “The final emphasis is not only on what Shakespeare does with the traces of Richard’s reign but also on what those traces do through Shakespeare – the play, in spite of its own pessimistic assumptions about history, has become the medium whereby certain fragments and remains of a long-lost world live on into the present day.”

With King Richard III finally being found some of the questions  surrounding him have been answered. But even if it is proved that he was not the murderer portrayed by Shakespeare, it seems unlikely that the play Richard III will lose its hold on public imagination.

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Italy and the Italians in Shakespeare

The Gentleman in Pink

The Gentleman in Pink

The English have been fascinated by Italy for centuries, never more so than during the period in which Shakespeare lived. Sir Henry Wotton, who represented King James as the English Ambassador to Venice from 1604, was more knowledgeable than most. Wotton brought back to England glorious paintings of the Venetian Doges that are still in the Royal Collection, and a birds-eye view of the city painted in 1611 which he proudly donated to Eton College and still hangs there.

Doctor Carol Rutter is researching Wotton’s life in preparation for a full biography of the fascinating man. The surviving comprehensive archives of the city contain much information about its organisation and the confidence of its rulers, but Venice was also a place of questionable morals, as in Othello and The Merchant of Venice.

It wasn’t just Venetians who were rich and fashionable, as the paintings of the Italian artist Giovanni Battista Moroni testify. Little is known of Moroni, who is thought to have been born between 1520 and 1524, and to have died in 1579 or 1580 in the little north-Italian town of Albino. Unlike more famous painters who headed for the main cultural centres in Italy he worked within a fairly small area between Bergamo and Albino, an area governed by Venice. The recent exhibition of his work at the Royal Academy has brought new attention to his portrait paintings, and I caught it just before it ended.

When establishing himself Moroni moved to Bergamo where he painted members of the local aristocracy. Rich and fashionably dressed, the painting show the sitters, many of whom are anonymous, full length. Moroni doesn’t flatter them, and they sometimes look rather awkward: perhaps they’re not as sophisticated as their clothes make them look. Their gorgeous costumes, complete with jewellery and expensive accompaniments like swords, gloves, fans and books, are all exquisitely painted. Some of the paintings tell us more about the wealth and status of the sitter than their identity and character.

The Lady in Red

The Lady in Red

The aristocratic ladies have the wealth of Shakespeare’s Portia, wearing their glorious clothes slightly self-consciously, and seem confined by their wealth just as Portia is by her inheritance. The young men seem like her suitors, looking as impressive as they can in order to make a good marriage.
In Belmont is a lady richly left,
And she is fair, and, fairer than that word,
Of wondrous virtues…
Nor is the wide world ignorant of her worth,
For the four winds blow in from every coast
Renowned suitors, and her sunny locks
Hang on her temples like a golden fleece…
And many Jasons come in quest of her.

Moroni’s most perceptive paintings come from the period after he returned to the smaller town of Albino, where he had been brought up.

Portrait of a Doctor

Portrait of a Doctor

Many of these people are middle-class: doctors, lawyers, even a tailor.  Moroni increasingly moved away from elaborate backgrounds to concentrate on the faces and upper bodies of his sitters, including their hands. These people seem more comfortable: they’re not trying so hard to impress. Here are confident, humorous young men like Benedick and older people with faces full of character. My eye kept on being drawn to the portrait of the old man below, apparently a lawyer, though it was the likeness to Paul Scofield’s King Lear that kept me looking. Moroni’s old man, “disgruntled” according to Sarah Dunant, gives the viewer a challenging look.

Portrait of an Elderly Man Seated with a Book

Portrait of an Elderly Man Seated with a Book

Moroni’s paintings were highly valued in London during the nineteenth century, when his style was admired by other creative artists. The exhibition catalogue quotes George Eliot’s description from Daniel Deronda of the character Grandcourt “the chair of red-brown velvet brocade was a becoming back-ground for his pale-tinted well-cut features and exquisite long hands: omitting the cigar, you might have imagined him a portrait by Moroni, who would have rendered wonderfully the impenetrable gaze and air of distinction; and a portrait by that great master would have been quite as lively a companion as Grandcourt was disposed to be”. The sitters are both mysterious and familiar, like so many of Shakespeare’s characters are.

If you want to immerse yourself in Shakespeare and Italian Renaissance Culture, the second summer school organised by Shakespeare in Italy will be perfect. Last summer’s two-week school was so successful they are repeating it, once again in the beautiful city of Urbino, a walled city in the hills further south. The City is a World Heritage site, the birthplace of the painter Raphael and the setting for Castiglione’s Book of the Courtier. Director Bill Alexander and actors Josie Lawrence and Michael Pennington will be leading studies on Othello, The Taming of the Shrew and Coriolanus and the school is organised by actors Julian Curry and Mary Chater.

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Shakespeare in London

Tower of London

Tower of London

With the ending of the RSC’s London season of the two Henry IV plays, performances of Shakespeare’s plays in the capital are currently a little few and far between. Shakespeare’s Globe is taking its winter break, and the new Sam Wanamaker Theatre isn’t (yet) performing any Shakespeare.

Time Out’s listings include the West End version of the film Shakespeare in Love, a production of The Merchant of Venice and a production of Othello. All the links are on their site. Later in the year the capital will see Shakespeare’s Globe’s Justice and Mercy season, beginning with The Merchant of Venice starring Jonathan Pryce, a production of Hamlet directed by renowned Japanese director Kurosawa, the much-anticipated Hamlet starring Benedict Cumberbatch and Cheek by Jowl’s Russian Measure for Measure. The National Theatre’s season has just been announced under its new Artistic Director Rufus Norris with no Shakespeare on the timetable for the summer though a production of As You Like It is promised for the autumn.

shuffle2If you’re wanting some Shakespeare on stage now, there’s at least one option that Time Out isn’t listing. Over the last few years a number of small companies playing Shakespeare have emerged, and I’ve been told about a collaboration between four of them. Shakespeare Shuffle will be a production of Macbeth at the Greenwich Theatre on 30 and 31 January. The participants are the Handlebards, Smooth Faced Gentlemen, The Merely Players and Permanently Bard. The companies have been performing Shakespeare successfully in their own style, and on this occasion each one will take an act of Macbeth before coming together as a shuffled ensemble for the fifth act. It’s the first time they’ve worked together, but they are planning more collaborations over the next couple of years. They’re all inventive and energetic companies and it definitely sounds like one to catch!

Holy Trinity Church, Stratford-upon-Avon

Holy Trinity Church, Stratford-upon-Avon

Time Out suggests that London is “the Bard’s spiritual home”, so what else might the keen Shakespeare fan do for the next couple of months? As a Stratfordian I’d suggest that Londoners will always get nearer to Shakespeare’s spiritual heart in Stratford-upon-Avon, so they could always visit his own town to take in a Shakespeare play or two (strong productions of Love’s Labour’s Lost and Much Ado About Nothing are playing until the beginning of March). Then are loads of places in Stratford and the surrounding villages where you can get a real feel for what life was like in Shakespeare’s England. The Shakespeare Houses, The Guild Chapel, King Edward’s School and the almshouses, Holy Trinity Church containing his monument and grave, to name just a few. It’s a town best appreciated on foot and there are excellent walking tours around the town.

Most of the London Shakespeare knew is long gone, destroyed by the Great Fire in 1666, by the Blitz in the second world war, and by subsequent massive building developments. Recently archaeological digs have rediscovered remains of some of the early theatres dating back to the 1590s. These are astonishing survivals given that they were not exactly well-built in the first place. That amazing medieval fortress, the Tower of London, is the most obvious London building that Shakespeare knew still to be seen today. The Tower is a threatening presence in a number of plays, particularly Richard III. Here Clarence is murdered, Lord Hastings executed and the little princes Edward and Richard meet their end. “I do not like the Tower of any place” says Edward, and his brother worries that “I shall not sleep in quiet at the Tower”.

It is still possible to rediscover other bits of Shakespeare’s London. As in Stratford, it’s best found on foot. The London Cultureseekers Group are holding two “Shakespeare and his London” Guided Walks on the afternoons of 14th and 15th February, lasting 2 hrs 15 minutes. You’ll have to click on “More meetups” to get the details.

The London Cultureseekers Group – Meet People in London!

London, GB
14,483 Cultureseekers

If you’re interested in exploring London’s history & culture with other like minded people, then this is the group for you!We meetup 2-3 times a week to explore museums, art …

Next Meetup

Cinema: ‘Testament of Youth’

Saturday, Jan 31, 2015, 1:15 PM
24 Attending

Check out this Meetup Group →

There are also regular guided walks to Shakespeare’s London. Every Friday there is a 90-minute walk called Shakespeare in the City run by a guide who performs speeches from Shakespeare’s plays during the walk. The Museum of London takes walking tours around Shakespeare’s London, led by their own guides. This commercial company takes a number of different London walks including, on Wednesdays, a Shakespeare and Dickens Walk. If you’re interested in reading about Shakespeare and London take a look at the British Library page.

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