John Harvard, Boston and the Shakespeare Association of America

John Harvard

Today the Shakespeare Association of America’s fortieth anniversary meeting begins in Boston. It will be the largest meeting the Association’s ever held, with over 1000 people signed up.

I’ve had a few days to soak up its history of this great city, where you can still see many places associated with the American Revolution including the house from which Paul Revere began his historic midnight ride to Lexington in 1775 to warn of the arrival of British troops.

Most visitors while in Boston also visit Cambridge and the site of one of the USA’s most famous and historic universities, Harvard. This place also has a link with Shakespeare’s home town of Stratford-upon-Avon.

Harvard House

Harvard House in Stratford is the home of Katherine Rogers, the mother of John Harvard. In 1605 she married Robert Harvard, a man much older than her, a butcher and tavern-keeper, at Holy Trinity Church in Stratford.

The couple moved to London where on 26 November 1607 their son John was baptised in St Saviour’s Church, Southwark. Only a month later on 31 December Shakespeare’s young brother, Edmund, was buried in the same church, which was close to the Globe Theatre. Shakespeare must have known Katherine and Robert, and they could hardly have avoided knowing him as a leading member of the King’s Men and the writer of plays for performance before the King.

John Harvard inherited his mother’s estate (she had become quite wealthy through marrying and outliving two husbands) and emigrated to America in 1637 but died only a year later, aged 30. Having no children he left half his estate and his library of books to the planned new college in Cambridge Massachusetts. It was decided to name the college after him, its first major benefactor.  For more on this history, click on this link.

In Harvard Yard stands a statue to John Harvard under which visitors stand to have their pictures taken. It seems to be particularly popular with parents with young children, who touch the toe of the statue, perhaps hoping it will bring them the luck to be able to attend Harvard themselves.

The plaque and stonework from St Saviour's, Southwark

Nearby stands Harvard Memorial Church. In its wall is embedded a piece of stone from St Saviour’s Church in Southwark where Harvard was baptised, a link with the country of his birth, and, unwittingly, a link with William Shakespeare.

Harvard’s parents, like Shakespeare’s, had few advantages, but he was lucky in that his mother became wealthy enough for him to study in Cambridge University in England where he took holy orders before emigrating to America. But like Shakespeare, his is a story of a boy from a humble background who, with the benefit of a grammar school education, was able to make a success of his life and to leave a legacy of which he could never have dreamed.

 

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Music for Shakespeare’s Henry V: Val Brodie’s discoveries

Charles Calvert

One of the quiet pleasures of being a librarian is the satisfaction of finding an elusive fact for a reader, or helping them make a discovery about a previously unrecognised item. The Shakespeare Centre Library and Archive holds quite a number of books and documents with no apparent connection with Stratford-upon-Avon. Stratford’s strong association with Shakespeare has meant that for centuries people such as writers, translators and theatre professionals have wanted their work to find a home at Shakespeare’s Birthplace, and the Library and Archive is now situated in a building just across the garden.

Val Brodie is someone who had several what she calls “Eureka moments” in the Library and Archive while I was working there. Researchers looking into original sheet music for productions are rare, and she is one of the few people to investigate the two massive volumes of records relating to Charles Calvert’s spectacular 1872 Manchester production of Henry V. I remember Val’s surprise and delight when she found that these illustrated volumes, containing the original music, were in Stratford after she had already made enquiries in Manchester.

Ralph Vaughan Williams

It became even more exciting when she called up some of the incidental music used by the Benson Company at the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre in the early years of the twentieth century. Some of this music was written by the great composer Ralph Vaughan Williams. It was already known that some of it was his original manuscript. As it happened a member of the RSC’s music department is also something of a Vaughan Williams specialist and between him and Val it was possible to establish that far more of the music is in his own hand than had been suspected. These manuscript additions sometimes show him rewriting sections of music for the orchestra at the last minute.

Val’s written her compelling story up for Blogging Shakespeare: do take a look.

And if you’d like to find out more about Ralph Vaughan Williams, here’s a link to the Ralph Vaughan Williams Society which includes some sound files so you can hear a sample of his music.

 

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Shakespeare: staging the world

This summer one of the most important events for anyone wanting to know more about why Shakespeare matters will be a visit to the British Museum’s exhibition Shakespeare: staging the world. Booking is already open for the exhibition, running from 19 July to 25 November.

Part of the World Shakespeare Festival running alongside the London Olympics, the exhibition will reflect on how the world came to Shakespeare’s London, and how Londoners perceived the rest of the world. There was tremendous interest in every new discovery, and theatre reflected this excitement, not least in Shakespeare’s plays which featured foreign countries and exotic characters like Othello and Caliban. Plays were not just entertaining, but also informative, and playhouses opened a window onto the wider world.

The Lyte jewel

The exhibition will include a range of objects including paintings, manuscripts and jewels, including items like the Lyte Jewel, presented to Thomas Lyte in 1610 in recognition of his work tracing James I’s genealogy back to Banquo, as featured by Shakespeare in Macbeth. This glorious jewel includes diamonds set in gold surrounding a miniature portrait of the king painted by Thomas Hilliard.

Professor Jonathan Bate is contributing to the exhibition:

We will be using Shakespeare’s amazing characters and evocative locations as a way of showing how all the world was a stage, full of dramatic encounters between cultures and nationalities.

As if this wasn’t enough, The British Museum is collaborating with Radio 4 on a series beginning 16 April  on Shakespeare’s Restless World. The full details, including a clip of Neil MacGregor talking about the series, are here, and see here for another version of the news about the series.

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Bram Stoker’s centenary and the Shakespeare connection

2012 marks the centenary of the death of Bram Stoker. At the time of his death on 20 April 1912 he would probably have seen the years he spent in London, theatrical manager to the great Shakespearian actor Henry Irving, as the height of his public career. He began his career as a journalist in Dublin, and continued to write during the 30 years he lived in London. He could never have guessed that his name would become famous for one of his eighteen novels, Dracula, while the careers of Henry Irving and Ellen Terry, both hugely famous actors in their time would be if not forgotten, hardly mainstream. So it is with that most ephemeral of art forms, theatre.

But Dracula, published in 1897, has inspired countless other films, plays and books, and in the last few years vampirism has become cool again. No wonder the centenary of the death of the man who started it all is going to be celebrated so extensively.

By coincidence, last year an early diary of Bram Stoker’s was found on the Isle of Wight, and this is to be published during March under the title The Lost Journal of Bram Stoker; the Dublin Years.

An international conference is being hosted by the University of  Hull’s Department of English and School of Arts and New Media in association with the Centre for Victorian Studies over 3 days from 12-14 April. Entitled Bram Stoker and Gothic Transformations the conference will focus on the gothic genre, including Dracula and vampirism. Part of the conference will take place in Grimsby, acknowledging that a section of the book is set in the town.

Irving as Mephistopheles in Faust

The Shakespeare link will be celebrated by a conference and dinner to be held in Stratford-upon-Avon on 14 and 15 April. The figure of Dracula was in part inspired by Henry Irving’s acting, in particular his portrayal of Mephistopheles in the successful play Faust. Irving’s major Shakespeare roles included Hamlet, Benedick, Macbeth, Richard III, Shylock, Malvolio, Cardinal Wolsey and King Lear. A major collection of material collected by Bram Stoker relating to Irving’s over twenty years’ tenure of the Lyceum Theatre is kept at the Shakespeare Centre Library and Archive in Stratford-upon-Avon.

In London on 21 April, a symposium entitled Open Graves, Open Minds, is to be held at Keats House.

There will be a major public conference on 5-6 July at Trinity College Dublin, where Stoker studied. It will be followed by a presentation at the National Library of Ireland on 7 July. The main aim of the conference will be to try to expand the critical focus away from an exclusive obsession with Dracula and take account of the full extent of Stoker’s writing, from his other Gothic novels, The Lair of the White Worm and The Snake’s Pass, to his short stories and journalism. It will also consider Stoker’s relationship to late nineteenth-century Ireland and especially Dublin, and address his status as an ‘Irish’ writer of substance.

Dracula film poster

Dracula was made popular by the 1931 film starring Bela Lugosi, and the world of film will also be celebrating. Hammer Films, who made nine Dracula films, are planning a revival with a new Dracula film. And Stoker has already been honoured with special showings at the Oporto film festival in Portugal 25 Feb-6 March

More information about Bram Stoker and the forthcoming celebrations can be found on the Bram Stoker Estate website and that for the Bram Stoker Society Newsletter.

Regular readers of this blog may have had difficulty with the link to the BSA Education blog in the last post. The link should now be working so do revisit the post and click on the link.

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Shakespeare in Education: a new blog for the BSA

I’ve been working on launching a new blog, Shakespeare in Education, on behalf of the BSA’s Education network. I wrote a few weeks ago about the British Shakespeare Association’s Lancaster Conference, and since then education specialist James Stredder and I have been workingfinalising the blog which is now live.

It’s hoped that this will become a forum for discussion for members of the BSA as well as anyone else who takes an interest in education at any level. My own area is in resources, particularly theatre archives, and their use for education and informal learning of all kinds. I’ve taken a great interest in  understanding how theatre works, why particular decisions are made, and the input of many creative people that builds towards each unique production of a Shakespeare play for many years. Studying theatre archives such as photographs or posters can also offer a way in to Shakespeare’s plays for students who struggle with Shakespeare on the page.

Do take a look at the new site. It isn’t just for professional teachers: the free sample online issue of the new journal Teaching Shakespeare includes an interview with voice coach Cicely Berry. And if that isn’t enough, one of the posts on the site makes some unexpected connections between Shakespeare and Lady Gaga.

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Shakespeare at Yale

 

Henry Woodward as Petruchio

It isn’t just the UK that’s gone Shakespeare-mad to coincide with this year’s London Olympics and World Shakespeare Festival. At Yale University in the USA a fabulous exhibition is running that highlights the Beinecke Library’s outstanding collections, called Remembering Shakespeare. To accompany the exhibition Matt Hunter is posting a daily blog containing a variety of digital images and commentary. Among the books and documents which they are illustrating on the blog are many examples of published plays by both Shakespeare and his contemporaries, and for anyone not able to visit in person this is a wonderful resource. Among artistic responses to Shakespeare’s works I particularly like Walter Crane’s illustrations for The Tempest.

 

Thomas Dowse's notebook including a quotation from The Rape of Lucrect

Other Shakespeare-related exhibitions at Yale include one called While these visions did appear and there’s an online exhibition featuring some of the glorious works of art from the Yale Center for British Art.

 If you’re able to get to these exhibitions, they are obviously exceptional, so do go. Otherwise, enjoy the online exhibitions and the blog!

 

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Gregory Doran: Royal Shakespeare Company Artistic Director in waiting

Today Gregory Doran (universally known as Greg), has been appointed as the new Artistic Director of the Royal Shakespeare Company, the most important job in the world of Shakespeare. Those who have been watching Greg for the last two decades will know that after more than a decade of upheaval for the company, the performance of Shakespeare’s plays will be at the top of his list. Here’s a link to The Stage’s article.

 Greg has been an actor as well as a director and worked his way up the company gaining the respect of theatre professionals, academics and audiences. Although he can’t avoid being seen as the predictable candidate his record speaks for itself, as he’s worked successfully all round the world winning a number of prestigious awards and in a variety of media including TV.

A scene from Greg Doran's production of Venus and Adonis

In 2008 he was able to attract a star cast including both David Tennant and Patrick Stewart to perform Hamlet and Love’s Labour’s Lost and the resulting productions succeeded in introducing new audiences to Shakespeare as well as being critically well-received. He’s not just a “safe pair of hands”. He’s taken risks with little-known early modern plays such as Sejanus and The Island Princess, running the 2002 Jacobean season at the Swan Theatre, paired The Taming of the Shrew with John Fletcher’s The Tamer Tamed, staged non-dramatic works like Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales, The Odyssey and a puppet version of Shakespeare’s poem Venus and Adonis, and he’s directed brand new plays like last winter’s Written on the Heart.

In his interview this evening for Radio 4’s Front Row he talked about how he hopes to re-establish a London home for the Company and the importance of community involvement, as well as his passion for the work of the RSC’s “house playwright”, William Shakespeare and the need to place him in his context as one among many outstanding Elizabethan and Jacobean writers.

 The RSC has achieved an enormous amount over the past decade and when Greg Doran takes over the running of the company in September his first job will be to bring together a new artistic team. It will be exciting to see how the RSC, and Shakespeare onstage, continue to develop under his leadership.

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Shakespeare’s shipwrecks

Last week on Twitter, someone drily pointed out in response to the RSC’s new season, that Shakespeare never wrote a shipwreck trilogy. The What country friends is this? season is certainly unusual, and the cynical might say it’s a marketing strategy designed to push up ticket sales.

 So is there any justification for putting on productions of plays that feature shipwrecks? Does looking at these plays, The Comedy of Errors, Twelfth Night and The Tempest, as a group make us see them differently?  The RSC’s publicity suggests that the trilogy aims to create “one world of shipwreck, grief, laughter, love and reunion…exploring migration, exile, shipwreck and the discovery of brave new worlds”. It’s quite a lot to live up to.

You can certainly see the attraction of shipwrecks when devising the plot of a play. With no explanation at all, characters can appear in a foreign location and reinvent themselves. The Comedy of Errors and Twelfth Night both explore this idea, though it’s interesting to see how much more slickly Shakespeare uses it in Twelfth Night where Viola appears onstage, swiftly covering all the audience needs to know in a few lines, compared with Egeon’s long explanation of the story so far that opens The Comedy of Errors. Seeing Shakespeare shape his material shows how much his skills had developed by the middle of his career.

But in both these plays the shipwreck is much more than a plot device. It’s an unpredictable force that splits people from their families, and because the people involved in both plays are twins, it separates people from part of themselves. This is almost the first thing Antipholus of Syracuse tells us about himself:

Lenny Henry as Antipholus of Syracuse in the National Theatre's production of The Comedy of Errors

I to the world am like a drop of water
That in the ocean seeks another drop,
Who, falling there to find his fellow forth,
Unseen, inquisitive, confounds himself.
So I, to find a mother and a brother,
In quest of them, unhappy, lose myself.

 And in Twelfth Night Viola, parted from her twin brother Sebastian, feels incomplete without him. She even dresses like him “for him I imitate”.  In both these plays, the storms both divide people from and reconnect them with parts of themselves. 

In the third play of the RSC’s trilogy, The Tempest, the shipwreck has a different purpose. Here it’s a trap set by Prospero to punish the brother who usurped him. Through his words to Miranda we know “There’s no harm done”, and the uncertainly and tension usually associated with shipwrecks is defused.

Pericles shipwrecked

If I’d been putting this season together I’d have made sure that Pericles was the third of the trilogy. It’s not often performed, but it has the sound of the sea pulsing through it. Not one but two storms occur during the play. The first divides Pericles from his identity, “what I have been, I have forgot to know”, while the second divides him from his most precious possessions, his wife and newly-born child. It’s in the second storm scene that it’s thought Shakespeare took over the writing from his collaborator George Wilkins. It’s certainly the point where the play really begins to grab you.

When Pericles is eventually reunited with his lost daughter, Marina, the emotion is as overwhelming as the storm in which she was born: “put me to present pain, lest this great sea of joy, rushing upon me, o’er-bear the shores of my mortality, and drown me with their sweetness”. He greets her:
Oh come hither, thou that beget’st him that did thee beget,
Thou that was born at sea, buried at Tharsus,
And found at sea again.

For me this is the most moving scene in all of Shakespeare’s works, and shipwreck runs right through it. 

In all these plays, the sea eventually heals divided, broken lives: “tempests are kind, and salt waves fresh in love!”

 The main trilogy runs until early October, and there will be a brief opportunity to see Pericles at the Courtyard Theatre from 5-7 October when it will be staged by amateurs as part of the Open Stages strand of the World Shakespeare Festival. So if you want to see Shakespeare’s best shipwreck play, don’t miss it.

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Shakespeare and the staff of life

Drought, crop failure, disease. The TV shows pictures of helpless people trying to dig in soil as dry as dust: unless international action is taken to help they will soon become heart-wrenching images of starving children. In Kenya alone there have been repeated crises in 2002, 2006, and 2009, and the situation is now just short of being a full famine.

 Many of our health problems in the west are caused by excess of food but it’s not long ago that people in the West also suffered malnutrition. In Shakespeare’s England, it was an ever-present threat. Shakespeare’s Coriolanus begins with civil unrest caused by food shortage. The people want “corn at our price”, and claim that the government is artificially driving prices up by hoarding grain. Menenius, one of the senators, at first suggests that the crop failure is an act of God:
                              For the dearth,
The gods, not the patricians, make it, and
Your knees to them, not arms, must help.

He next tries to justify the government’s actions by telling the story of the belly, in which Rome is a body that works only because one organ, the belly, takes in all the food, and distributes it to all the limbs that do the work.
There was a time when all the body’s members
Rebelled against the belly, thus accused it:
That only like a gulf it did remain
I’th’midst o’th’body, idle and unactive,
Still cupboarding the viand, never bearing
Like labour with the rest.

 His listeners constantly interrupt, and fail to be convinced by his tale.

Woodcut showing the making of bread in bakeries, from The Assize of Bread 1608

Crop failures were not uncommon, and living in towns and cities made people more vulnerable. In 1587 William Harrison, in his Description of England, comments on the difficulties being suffered by people living in English towns, because with no space to grow their own grain they were reliant on the fluctuating price of bread:

And as for wheaten bread, they eat it when they can reach unto the price of it, contenting themselves in the meantime with bread made of oats or barley: a poor estate, God wot!

Bread was the most important of foods, and the book The Assise of Bread set down the prices, regulated by law, which bakers were allowed to charge according to the variable price of wheat. Poor harvests and the consequent scarcity of corn caused violent demonstrations in the English midlands in 1604, and Shakespeare may have had these in mind when he wrote Coriolanus in 1607/8.

Shakespeare also knew about the process of making bread. In Troilus and Cressida Pandarus teases Troilus, who’s in love with Cressida, by insisting she is unapproachable unless the right steps are followed, just like making a loaf: “He that will have a cake out of the wheat must tarry the grinding”. Not only the grinding, but the bolting (sieving) of the flour, the leavening, and the rest: “the kneading, the making of the cake, the heating of the oven, and the baking; nay, you must stay the cooling too, or you may chance to burn your lips”. The obvious sexual innuendo only adds to the sense of Troilus’ impatient longing.

The title page of The Assise of Bread

The Shakespeare Centre Library and Archive’s copy of The Assise of Bread dates from 1608. The full title indicates that the book contains  “sondry good and needful ordinances, for Bakers, Brewers, Innholders, Victuallers, Vintners and Butchers, and also other Assises in weightes and measures, …”.

As bailiff in Stratford-upon-Avon when William was a little boy, his father was responsible for the quality of the beer sold in town as well as checking on the quality and quantity of bread sold. The regulation of the making and supply of these staple foods ensured the health of people in every town and city.

 If you want to help prevent starvation there, the Save the Children Fund has a special East Africa appeal.

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Edward Alleyn’s legacy and Shakespeare’s theatre

Edward Alleyn

Most of what we know about the elusive world of Elizabethan and Jacobean theatre is found in one unique collection of manuscripts. These are known as the Henslowe-Alleyn archive, working theatrical documents created by impresario Philip Henslowe and his illustrious son-in-law, actor-manager Edward Alleyn. While the records of most theatre companies were lost, Alleyn’s were deliberately preserved as part of  Dulwich College.

 These documents have been pored over by scholars searching for information about Shakespeare since at least the eighteenth century, though ironically the documents contain hardly a single reference to him. Facsimiles and transcripts of the most important sections were published decades ago, but in the past few years the documents have been digitised and now several thousand pages are freely available for anyone to consult at the website.    There are plans to make these even more accessible, but already the site contains more than a dozen essays explaining the documents and their importance.

 On Tuesday evening Peter Jolly from Dulwich College spoke to the members of Stratford-upon-Avon’s Shakespeare Club about the history of the collection and how the documents relate to Shakespeare and the world of Elizabethan theatre.

Edward Alleyn as Tamburlaine

Dulwich Collegewas founded in 1619 through Edward Alleyn’s purchase of a tract of land in South London for which he paid the immense sum of £35,000. Alleyn’s money came from a combination of his inheritance of Philip Henslowe’s fortune and his own earnings as the most talented actor of his day, creating sensational roles including Marlowe’s Tamburlaine. The documents, kept in their own chest, were part of his gift to the college he set up to educate scholars from several specific parishes in London.

 Peter Jolly explained that the documents that form the collection give us information about all aspects of theatre administration. There is the contract for the building of the Fortune Theatre, a play manuscript, and an actor’s part (Alleyn’s for Orlando Furioso).

The Plat or Plot for the second part of The Seven Deadly Sins is a document placed backstage during the performance to remind actors of the running order, and is rather reminiscent of the scene breakdown and availability charts found in modern prompt books.

Then there is what is known as Henslowe’s Diary itself, not actually a diary but an account book relating to the Fortune and Rose Theatres run by Philip Henslowe. One of the most engaging items is the inventory which lists items of theatrical costume, some of which can be linked to particular plays or actors.

 It has not escaped the perils that have affected most Shakespeare documentation. In the eighteenth century people removed items from the collection which have since turned up elsewhere including the British Library, the Bodleian and Folger Shakespeare Library. The one Shakespeare item known to be in Alleyn’s collection was a copy of the 1609 Sonnets quarto, but sadly this book has never been found. Documents in the collection have also been subject to forgery, Payne Collier adding Shakespeare’s name in at least one place.

During his theatrical career Edward Alleyn was the most famous of actors, but is now little remembered. The speaker suggested that the lack of interest in Alleyn is because there is no mystery associated with him. His life was well documented, sensible, and with no criminal involvement. In addition the plays in which Alleyn starred have not continued to be performed and studied to anything like the extent that Richard Burbage’s roles of Othello, Hamlet and Lear, written for him by Shakespeare, have.

Peter Jolly ended by showing us the poem written by Ben Jonson about Alleyn, similar in structure to that he wrote about Shakespeare. It’s a fitting reminder of how much playwrights and actors both depend on and challenge each other.

It ends:
             ‘Tis just, that who did give
So many poets life, by one should live.

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