Skip to main content
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.

The many Shakespearean roles of Irish immigrant Ada Rehan
Ada Rehan
Shakespeare and Beyond

The many Shakespearean roles of Irish immigrant Ada Rehan

Posted
Author
Shakespeare & Beyond

Born Ada Crehan in Limerick, Ireland, Ada Rehan arrived in Brooklyn with her family at age five. Her big break came in the late 1870s, when theater manager Augustin Daly hired her for his New York company.

What's onstage in March at Shakespeare theaters across America
Henry IV, Part One
Shakespeare and Beyond

What's onstage in March at Shakespeare theaters across America

Posted
Author
Esther French

Which Shakespeare plays are onstage this month? We check in with our theater partners Chicago Shakespeare Theater, Atlanta Shakespeare Company, Shakespeare in Detroit, Chesapeake Shakespeare Company, Commonwealth Shakespeare Company, Gamut Theatre, The Old Globe, and Oregon Shakespeare Festival.

Something Rotten: An interview with the Broadway musical creators Wayne and Karey Kirkpatrick
Something Rotten
Shakespeare and Beyond

Something Rotten: An interview with the Broadway musical creators Wayne and Karey Kirkpatrick

Posted
Author
Shakespeare & Beyond

Two brothers living in England in 1595 have had their playwriting careers upended by the arrival of a new guy from Stratford upon Avon, William Shakespeare. That’s the plot of Something Rotten, a new musical that opened on Broadway in…

The pelican in her piety
Richard Fox's crosier
Shakespeare and Beyond

The pelican in her piety

Posted
Author
Esther French

If you search for the word “pelican” in Shakespeare’s plays, you come across three instances, in Hamlet, King Lear, and Richard II. All three refer to a symbolic meaning of the pelican that can feel remote to today’s reader or…

Lady Mary Wroth and 'The Countess of Montgomery's Urania'
Public domain image of Lady Mary Wroth
Shakespeare and Beyond

Lady Mary Wroth and 'The Countess of Montgomery's Urania'

Posted
Author
Shakespeare & Beyond

Lady Mary Wroth watched Shakespeare act in his own plays, heard her relative Sir Walter Raleigh talk about founding Virginia, and almost certainly met Pocahantas and ambassadors from Morocco. Wroth’s later prose fiction echoes elements of her own life, including…

Five women artists: Interpreting Shakespeare through sculpture and book art
Shakespeare and Beyond

Five women artists: Interpreting Shakespeare through sculpture and book art

Posted
Author
Shakespeare & Beyond

This blog post spotlights five female artists whose interpretations of Shakespeare’s works are part of the Folger collection. We decided to highlight three sculptors and two book artists.

Shakespeare scenes on Mardi Gras floats
Shakespeare and Beyond

Shakespeare scenes on Mardi Gras floats

Posted
Author
Esther French

A poster in the Folger collections shows charming illustrations of Mardi Gras floats in New Orleans that represent 18 of Shakespeare’s plays.

Fakespeare: 5 quotes commonly misattributed to Shakespeare
Shakespeare and Beyond

Fakespeare: 5 quotes commonly misattributed to Shakespeare

Posted
Author
Esther French

Fake quotes have been in the news lately, from the Republican National Committee’s Abraham Lincoln flub to the bogus Winston Churchill quote about supporting funding for the arts during World War II. Such misattribution is familiar to Shakespeare enthusiasts. Every…

Shakespeare the salesman: Advertising Coca Cola, iPhones, and chewing tobacco
Marcus Ward calendar
Shakespeare and Beyond

Shakespeare the salesman: Advertising Coca Cola, iPhones, and chewing tobacco

Posted
Author
Esther French

Shakespeare is a familiar sight in the theater and on the movie screen, but he’s permeated many other areas of American life. Advertisers have picked up on the ubiquity of Shakespeare for more than two centuries.

Ira Aldridge takes the stage
Shakespeare and Beyond

Ira Aldridge takes the stage

Posted
Author
Sarah Hovde

Ira Aldridge as Aaron in Shakespeare’s Titus Andronicus. Since their revival by David Garrick in the early eighteenth century, Shakespeare and his plays have always generated a certain aura of celebrity, sometimes referred to as “Bardolatry.” Following in the footsteps…

What's onstage in February at Shakespeare theaters across America
The Two Gentlemen of Verona
Shakespeare and Beyond

What's onstage in February at Shakespeare theaters across America

Posted
Author
Esther French

Which Shakespeare plays are onstage this month? We check in with our theater partners Chesapeake Shakespeare Company, Atlanta Shakespeare Company, Alabama Shakespeare Festival, and Oregon Shakespeare Festival.

Love letters in Shakespeare: As You Like It, Hamlet, and The Two Gentlemen of Verona
As You Like It love letters
Shakespeare and Beyond

Love letters in Shakespeare: As You Like It, Hamlet, and The Two Gentlemen of Verona

Posted
Author
Esther French

We look at three instances of love letters in Shakespeare’s plays: Orlando’s love poems to Rosalind in As You Like It, Hamlet’s passionate missive to Ophelia in Hamlet, and Proteus’s romantic letter to Julia in The Two Gentlemen of Verona.

1 55 56 57 58 59 70