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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.

Birds of Shakespeare: The wild turkey
a male and female turkey with autumn leaves, acorns, turkey eggs, and turkey feathers
Shakespeare and Beyond

Birds of Shakespeare: The wild turkey

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Author
Missy Dunaway
What's onstage at Shakespeare theaters in November
Shakespeare and Beyond

What's onstage at Shakespeare theaters in November

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Two Tempests blow onstage this month, in Atlanta, GA, and Bethesda, MD. Meanwhile, Macbeth conquers Seattle. Here’s what the Folger’s Shakespeare theater partners are up to in November.

“I Want It That Way”: Rosaline & Juliet
Cast in & Juliet
Shakespeare and Beyond

“I Want It That Way”: Rosaline & Juliet

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Author
Austin Tichenor

“In both ‘Rosaline,’ a charming teen romcom streaming on Hulu, and ‘& Juliet,’ a splashy new musical making its Broadway debut this week, Shakespeare’s tragedy becomes a surprising springboard for music, comedy, and investigations into narrative ownership,” writes Austin Tichenor.

An Ofrenda to Shakespeare’s Afterlives
A man holding a calavera
Shakespeare and Beyond

An Ofrenda to Shakespeare’s Afterlives

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Author
Katherine Gillen, Adrianna M. Santos, and Kathryn Vomero Santos

Katherine Gillen, Adrianna M. Santos, and Kathryn Vomero Santos write about stage adaptations of “Hamlet” and “Romeo and Juliet” that engage with Día de los Muertos traditions, reframing Shakespeare’s meditations on life and death according to Indigenous and Latinx worldviews.

Birds of Shakespeare: The great cormorant
great cormorant
Shakespeare and Beyond

Birds of Shakespeare: The great cormorant

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Author
Missy Dunaway

In his plays Shakespeare deploys the cormorant as a symbol of insatiable hunger and gluttony, drawing also on the bird’s reputation as a portent of doom and evil.

What's onstage at Shakespeare theaters in October
Shakespeare and Beyond

What's onstage at Shakespeare theaters in October

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Author
Ben Lauer

King John (2022): Jessika D. Williams in “King John,” at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival. Photo by Jenny Graham. The fall harvest is ready, and this year, we’ve got a bumper crop of Shakespeare plays! If you’re in the mood for…

Excerpt - "Super-Infinite: The Transformations of John Donne" by Katherine Rundell
Shakespeare and Beyond

Excerpt - "Super-Infinite: The Transformations of John Donne" by Katherine Rundell

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Shakespeare & Beyond

“Spiritually speaking, many of us confronted with the thought of death perform the psychological equivalence of hiding in a box with our knees under our chin: Donne hunted death, battled it, killed it, saluted it, threw it parties.” Read more…

Excerpt: "The Final Curtain: The Art of Dying on Stage" by Laurence Senelick
The Final Curtain cover
Shakespeare and Beyond

Excerpt: "The Final Curtain: The Art of Dying on Stage" by Laurence Senelick

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Author
Shakespeare & Beyond

Shakespeare’s plays provide ample opportunity for dramatic deaths onstage, and 18th-century English actors like David Garrick transformed simple stage directions in the text into “stirring set-pieces,” as Laurence Senelick writes in the below excerpt from his new book, “The Final…

“Worthy service": The Tempest-uousness of The White Lotus
Natasha Rothwell and Murray Bartlett in The White Lotus
Shakespeare and Beyond

“Worthy service": The Tempest-uousness of The White Lotus

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Author
Austin Tichenor

HBO’s Emmy-winning “The White Lotus” transforms Shakespeare’s “The Tempest” into a darkly funny satire of the hospitality industry, writes Austin Tichenor.

Arthur Murphy's 18th-century collection of humor - Excerpt: "Laughing Histories" by Joy Wiltenburg
People laughing and playing music
Shakespeare and Beyond

Arthur Murphy's 18th-century collection of humor - Excerpt: "Laughing Histories" by Joy Wiltenburg

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Shakespeare & Beyond

“Murphy may be the first person in history to subject laughter to such intensive and extensive study, at least from the perspective of a laughter professional,” writes Joy Wiltenburg about the 18th-century writer’s 500-page compilation of humor, in this excerpt…

Henry VIII and herbals: Prince Charles and Camilla's visit to the Folger Shakespeare Library
Prince Charles and Camilla
Shakespeare and Beyond

Henry VIII and herbals: Prince Charles and Camilla's visit to the Folger Shakespeare Library

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Shakespeare & Beyond

See some of the Folger collection items that Charles and Camilla examined when they visited the Folger in 2005, including an early modern book on plants that got the prince’s attention.

Shakespeare Lines for Evil Laughter
Shakespeare and Beyond

Shakespeare Lines for Evil Laughter

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Author
emma poltrack

We’re helping you prepare for DC Public Library’s Evil Laugh Contest with some deviously delightful Shakespeare lines you can use in your performance.

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