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Shakespeare & Beyond

Shakespeare & Beyond

The Shakespeare & Beyond blog features a wide range of Shakespeare-related topics: the early modern period in which he lived, the ways his plays have been interpreted and staged over the past four centuries, the enduring power of his characters and language, and more.

Drawing Shakespeare: Julius Caesar
Julius Caesar bas-relief. Drawing by Paul Glenshaw.
Shakespeare and Beyond

Drawing Shakespeare: Julius Caesar

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Paul Glenshaw

Artist Paul Glenshaw describes drawing the Folger bas-relief of “Julius Caesar,” in which assassins with their knives start to turn away as Caesar dies. He pairs the image with a painting by Jean-Léon Gérôme at the Walters Art Museum in…

The First English Actresses
Nell Gwyn. Print, by R. Tomson after Peter Lely, from Cunningham, The story of Nell Gwyn. 1883. Folger Shakespeare Library.
Shakespeare and Beyond

The First English Actresses

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Georgianna Ziegler

In 1660, women (rather than men) began playing female roles, including female Shakespearean roles, on the professional English stage. Learn more about these early actresses.

In the Giving Vein: The Pop-Cultural Legacy of Olivier's Richard III
Shakespeare and Beyond

In the Giving Vein: The Pop-Cultural Legacy of Olivier's Richard III

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Author
Austin Tichenor

With a US audience of tens of millions in its TV release at the same time it was released in American theaters, Laurence Olivier’s film “Richard III” (1955) has left a lasting, sometimes hilarious, legacy in pop culture, from Peter…

The "American Nectar": William Hughes's hot chocolate
Shakespeare and Beyond

The "American Nectar": William Hughes's hot chocolate

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Marissa Nicosia

The perfect post for a winter’s day: Marissa Nicosia shares an early modern recipe for hot chocolate, associated with 17th-century author, botanist, and pirate William Hughes.

What's onstage at Shakespeare theaters in January
Oberon (Edward O'Blenis) emerges to survey his fairy kingdom. Photo by Liz Lauren.
Shakespeare and Beyond

What's onstage at Shakespeare theaters in January

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Author
Ben Lauer

Every month, we share a snapshot of Shakespeare in performance across the country. What’s onstage in January? We visit our theater partners to find out.

Five Faces of Shakespeare
Miss C.B. Currie. Miniature, Cosway binding, 1928. James Boaden, An Inquiry into the Authenticity of Various Pictures. 1824. Folger Shakespeare Library.
Shakespeare and Beyond

Five Faces of Shakespeare

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Author
Esther Ferington

Among the many treasures of the Folger is a lavish “Cosway binding” that includes five unique miniatures by a 20th-century British artist, “Miss C. B. Currie,” based on the images from the book itself. One of the oddest to modern…

In the News: In Rare Books, Centuries-Old Proteins Can Reveal the Past
Sample of book dust being removed from 17th-century Bible. Folger Shakespeare Library.
Shakespeare and Beyond

In the News: In Rare Books, Centuries-Old Proteins Can Reveal the Past

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Shakespeare & Beyond

Recent news about proteomics (the study of proteins) in the humanities has included a Folger Shakespeare Library project, irreverently called Project Dustbunny, that studies proteins in rare books to learn about those who once handled or read them.

Excerpt - 'Mad Blood Stirring' by Simon Mayo
'Mad Blood Stirring.' Simon Mayo. 2019.
Shakespeare and Beyond

Excerpt - 'Mad Blood Stirring' by Simon Mayo

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Shakespeare & Beyond

Inspired by a real-life episode, Simon Mayo’s novel ‘Mad Blood Stirring’ tells the powerful story of a Shakespeare production by African American prisoners of war at Dartmoor prison in England, near the end of the War of 1812.

Four Terrible New Year's Resolutions from "Love's Labor's Lost"
Shakespeare and Beyond

Four Terrible New Year's Resolutions from "Love's Labor's Lost"

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Ben Lauer

Happy New Year! We picked out four awful ideas for New Year’s resolutions from Shakespeare’s “Love’s Labor’s Lost” and added some hints for improvements.

Discover the five most popular #FolgerFinds of 2018
IMAGE: A silhouette image of Titania, the fairy queen, and Bottom, who has a giant donkey's head
Shakespeare and Beyond

Discover the five most popular #FolgerFinds of 2018

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Shakespeare & Beyond

Enjoy our five most popular #FolgerFinds posts on Instagram of items from the Folger Shakespeare Library collection, from a silhouette of a ‘Midsummer’ scene with Bottom and Titania to vintage photos of 19th-century actress Julia Marlowe.

Enjoy the top five Shakespeare & Beyond blog posts of 2018
Shakespeare and Beyond

Enjoy the top five Shakespeare & Beyond blog posts of 2018

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Shakespeare & Beyond

Enjoy our most popular Shakespeare & Beyond blog posts from 2018, an eclectic range including a tasty 17th-century recipe, a quiz, a new play on Sarah Bernhardt and Hamlet, a female science fiction author from 1666, and a look at…

Revisit the top five Shakespeare Unlimited podcast episodes of 2018
The Delacorte Theater in Central Park, home to The Public Theater's Shakespeare in the Park
Shakespeare and Beyond

Revisit the top five Shakespeare Unlimited podcast episodes of 2018

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Shakespeare & Beyond

Revisit some of our most popular 2018 Shakespeare Unlimited podcast episodes, from Shakespeare’s wife Anne Hathaway to a conversation with actor Derek Jacobi to the tyrants in Shakespeare’s plays.

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