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Shakespeare Unlimited

Episodes by Play

We’ve broadcast over 200 episodes of our Shakespeare Unlimited podcast. So… where to begin? Here’s an idea: put in your earbuds, find your favorite Shakespeare play on the list below, and start listening. From As You Like It to Timon of Athens, we’ve got an insightful episode for every play in the canon.

All’s Well That Ends Well

Episode 55: Elizabethan Medicine A conversation with former Folger Director Gail Kern Paster and scholar Barbara Traister puts into context many of the medical ideas in Shakespeare’s plays, including how Helena, heroine of All’s Well That Ends Well and daughter of a doctor, seeks to heal a king.

Episode 173: Mona Awad on All’s Well The author of 13 Ways of Looking at a Fat Girl and Bunny tells us about her new novel, which combines All’s Well That Ends Well with Macbeth to tell the supernatural and darkly funny story of a university theater professor with chronic hip and back pain and a mutinous cast.

Antony and Cleopatra

Episode 32: The Year of Lear An interview with James Shapiro about 1606, which he describes in his book The Year of Lear, includes all three plays Shakespeare wrote that year, including Antony and Cleopatra.

Episode 118: Harriet Walter In a wide-ranging discussion of her Shakespearean acting career, including some leading male roles, Walter also recalls playing Cleopatra, which she considers “the greatest part for a woman.”

Episode 192: John Adams Gives Antony and Cleopatra the Operatic Treatment  Celebrated American composer John Adams shares what attacted him to Shakespeare’s play and what he learned transforming it from five dramatic acts to a two-act opera.

As You Like It

Episode 4: Shakespeare Outdoors As You Like It, largely set in a forest, has been a popular choice for outdoor productions of Shakespeare—a long-standing tradition with a surprising history.

Episode 16: Pronouncing English as Shakespeare Did  Linguist David Crystal and his son, actor Ben Crystal, discuss how English was pronounced in Shakespeare’s day, including a wealth of examples from As You Like It.

The Comedy of Errors

Episode 138: Shakespeare and Folktales Several examples from The Comedy of Errors are among those showing how folktales play a role in Shakespeare’s works.

Episode 64: Q Brothers—Othello Remix This podcast on the Q Brothers and their hip-hop Shakespeare adaptations includes a look back at their breakthrough show The Bomb-itty of Errors, based on The Comedy of Errors.

Coriolanus

Episode 34: Great Shakespeare Actors This conversation with scholar Stanley Wells about his book Great Shakespeare Actors: Burbage to Branagh begins with a surprising aspect of Laurence Olivier’s performances: his use of silences and pauses, including a poignant one in Coriolanus. Listen for more intriguing insights about great performances of the past.

Cymbeline

Episode 18: Rarely Performed Shakespeare One of the two rarely seen plays discussed in this episode is Cymbeline, produced by Fiasco Theater in 2011 and then in 2014 at the Folger; co-director Noah Brody talks about the challenges of staging it today and scholar Richard Schoch describes how Cymbeline waxed and waned in popularity in centuries past.

Hamlet

Episode 73: The Globe to Globe Hamlet Tour Artistic director Dominic Dromgoole and executive producer Tom Bird discuss how Shakespeare’s Globe staged Hamlet in 197 countries on a two-year tour, ending in 2016 on the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare’s death.

Episode 91: Derek Jacobi: Playing Hamlet In one of two parts of an extended Shakespeare Unlimited interview, renowned British actor Derek Jacobi recalls playing Hamlet throughout his career and his insights into the role.

Episode 111: The ABCs of Performing Hamlet A conversation with Jonathan Croall about his book Performing Hamlet: Actors in the Modern Age profiles performances of Hamlet by, among others, Richard Burton, Derek Jacobi, Maxine Peake, Jude Law, and Simon Russell Beale.

Episode 119: Hamlet 360: Virtual Reality Shakespeare In a bit of an audio tour de force, this episode offer a hands-on description of Hamlet 360: Thy Father’s Spirit, a virtual reality adaptation of Shakespeare’s play that showcases the unique advantages of this new format for the plays.

Episode 59: Shakespeare in Sign Language Walking through a Gallaudet University exhibition, First Folio: Eyes on Shakespeare, professor and curator Jilly Bradbury discusses how to perform Shakespeare without spoken words and the role of American Sign Language (ASL).

Episode 65: Shakespeare in California  In discussing Shakespeare in the American West, the conversation explores Hamlet’s “To be or not to be” speech in the Western movie My Darling Clementine, ultimately recited by Victor Mature as Doc Holliday.

Episode 62: Shakespeare and YA Novels Molly Booth discusses her time-travel YA (young adult) novel Saving Hamlet, with a heroine who slips back to the original production of Hamlet in Shakespeare’s time.

Episode 72: Adapting Shakespeare A conversation with playwrights on adapting Shakespeare includes Alexandra Petri and her play Tell My Story  –  Hamlet in the world of online fan fiction.

Episode 124: Lisa Klein on Ophelia Lisa Klein, whose YA novel Ophelia was made into a 2019 movie with Daisy Ridley in the title role, talks about her reinvention of Shakespeare’s character Ophelia, her relationship with Hamlet, and accounts of her death.

Episode 194: Ian McKellen on Playing Hamlet

Episode 207: James Ijames on Fat Ham

Episode 191: Brett Dean and Matthew Jocelyn on Their Hamlet Opera

Episode 188: Pamela Hutchinson on Asta Nielsen’s Hamlet

Episode 230: Eddie Izzard on Performing Hamlet Solo

Henry IV, Parts 1 and 2

Episode 89: Orson Welles and Shakespeare This look at Orson Welles’s Shakespeare films and other projects includes Welles as Falstaff in Chimes at Midnight, a monumental film that incorporates portions of Henry IV, Parts 1 and 2, and other plays.

Episode 94: Antony Sher  In an interview on several of his Shakespearean roles, Antony Sher discusses playing Falstaff in 2014 and his book about it, Year of the Fat Knight.

Episode 76: Phyllida Lloyd and All-Female Shakespeare We talk with Phyllida Lloyd about the influential trilogy of all-female Shakespeare productions she directed at the Donmar Warehouse in London, including Henry IV with Harriet Walter as King Henry IV.

Henry V

Episode 120: Michael Kahn In a wide-ranging interview on directing Shakespeare, Michael Kahn discusses his 1969 production of Henry V during the Vietnam War era.

Henry VI, Parts 1, 2, and 3

Episode 67: Shakespeare and Marlowe  Folger Director Michael Witmore and scholar Eric Rasmussen, editor of the Henry VI plays for the Arden Shakespeare, discuss the New Oxford Shakespeare’s decision to credit three different plays—Henry VI, Parts 1, 2, and 3—to both Shakespeare and fellow playwright Christopher Marlowe, including the digital humanities research behind the attribution.

Episode 100: Stephen Greenblatt on Shakespeare’s Tyrants In a conversation about his book Tyrant, Greenblatt discusses Shakespeare’s character Jack Cade in Henry VI, Part 2.

Episode 93: Dennis McCarthy and June Schlueter on the George North Manuscript In an interview with Dennis McCarthy and June Schlueter, this episode explores how a more than 400-year-old manuscript may have influenced several of Shakespeare’s plays, including the Jack Cade section of Henry VI, Part 2.

Episode 205: Patrick Page on King Lear and Shakespeare’s Villains

Henry VIII

Episode 13: When Romeo Was a Woman We talk with scholar and author Lisa Merrell about the widely admired 19th-century American actress Charlotte Cushman, who was as well known for playing male Shakespearean roles as female ones. In her later years, like many performers, she took on older roles; for Henry VIII, she played Cardinal Wolsey and Katherine on different nights.

Julius Caesar

Episode 98: Paterson Joseph: Julius Caesar and Me We speak with acclaimed British actor Paterson Joseph about his memoir Julius Caesar and Me, stemming from an all-black Royal Shakespeare Company production of Julius Caesar, set in Africa, in which he played the title role.

Episode 76: Phyllida Lloyd and All-Female Shakespeare We talk with Phyllida Lloyd, who recently directed three all-female Shakespeare productions at the Donmar Warehouse in London, including Julius Caesar with Harriet Walter as Brutus.

Episode 118: Harriet Walter Harriet Walter discusses her many Shakespearean roles, including the Lloyd-directed all-female Shakespeare trilogy; she played starring roles in each play, including Brutus in Julius Caesar.

Episode 135: The History of Shakespeare in American Schools A conversation with Professor Joseph Haughey of Northwest Missouri State University explores how Shakespeare entered the world of American education, including Mark Antony’s famed speech, “Friends, Romans, countrymen,” in popular primers.

Episode 140: James Shapiro on Shakespeare in a Divided America An interview with author James Shapiro includes the controversy over a production of Julius Caesar in New York.

King John

Episode 18: Rarely Performed Shakespeare In this exploration of two rarely performed plays, Stephanie Coltrin, who directed King John for Shakespeare by the Sea in San Pedro in 2013, is joined by scholar Richard Schoch, who describes King John‘s past popularity.

King Lear

Episode 94: Antony Sher  The late Sir Antony Sher discusses a variety of his past Shakespearean roles, including playing King Lear in 2016 and his book on the subject, Year of the Mad King.

Episode 121: Glenda Jackson After 23 years as a member of Parliament, famed actress Glenda Jackson returned to the stage to take on King Lear and other roles; she talks with us about playing a king, opportunities for women in the arts, and the intricacies of performing King Lear.

Episode 69: How King Lear Inspired Empire We talk with Ilene Chaiken, showrunner and executive producer for the Fox TV series Empire, about how King Lear—and other Shakespeare plays—inspired the plots and characters of the show, in which a hip-hop music executive sets his three children against each other.

Episode 32: The Year of Lear A conversation with James Shapiro about 1606, which he describes in The Year of Lear, includes all three plays Shakespeare wrote that year, among them, of course, King Lear.

Episode 84: Edward St. Aubyn on Dunbar Well-known British novelist Edward St. Aubyn discusses his book about a media mogul inspired by King Lear, part of the Hogarth Shakespeare series of novels.

Episode 205: Patrick Page on King Lear and Shakespeare’s Villains

Love’s Labor’s Lost

Episode 134: Peter Brook  Legendary director Peter Brook explores many of his past Shakespeare productions in this fascinating conversation. His long career at what was later renamed the Royal Shakespeare Company began in 1946, when he directed Love’s Labor’s Lost at the age of 20.

Macbeth

Episode 32: The Year of Lear A conversation with James Shapiro about 1606, which he describes in The Year of Lear, explores all three plays Shakespeare wrote that year, including Macbeth.

Episode 96: Astor Place Riot Almost 30 people died when troops fired on a New York riot in 1849 – a riot inflamed, astonishingly, by varying interpretations of Macbeth by British and American actors in two rival productions. Learn how that could happen, and what really lay behind it.

Episode 127: Shakespeare and Opera We talk with music librarian Colleen Fay about Shakespeare and opera, including Giuseppe Verdi’s opera Macbeth.

Episode 19: Shakespeare in Black and White This episode includes the landmark Depression-era all-black Macbeth, a 1936 production funded by the Federal Theater Project and directed by Orson Welles at the Lafayette Theatre in Harlem.

Episode 89: Orson Welles and Shakespeare Our conversation with scholar and author Michael Anderegg on Orson Welles and Shakespeare includes Welles’s classic 1948 film Macbeth.

Episode 72: Adapting Shakespeare A discussion with playwrights about adapting Shakespeare includes Chris Stezin and his high-stakes business play Mac, Beth.

Episode 195: Ian McKellen on Richard III, Macbeth, and Gandalf

Measure for Measure

Episode 82: Barry Edelstein: Thinking Shakespeare One of several acting exercises focuses on a line from Measure for Measure, contrasting with a line in Hamlet.

Episode 141: Emma Smith on This Is Shakespeare In a conversation about her book This is Shakespeare, Oxford professor Emma Smith discusses several plays, including Measure for Measure.

The Merchant of Venice

Episode 107: Shakespeare Uncovered A look at producing the Shakespeare TV series Shakespeare Uncovered includes The Merchant of Venice episode with F. Murray Abraham.

Episode 49: Shakespeare and Religion A wide-ranging discussion with David Scott Kastan, author of Will To Believe: Shakespeare and Religion, includes a look at how Elizabethan audiences imagined Jews when it was illegal for Jews to live in England.

Episode 104: Steven Berkoff: Shakespeare’s Heroes and Villains In a movie inspired by his one-man show, Shakespeare’s Villains, actor Steven Berkoff explores multiple villains, including Shylock.

Episode 138: Shakespeare and Folktales Several elements of The Merchant of Venice are included in this episode on how folktales shape and are referred to in Shakespeare’s plays.

Episode 231: Green World: Michelle Ephraim on Discovering Shakespeare and Reevaluating The Merchant of Venice

The Merry Wives of Windsor

Episode 89: Orson Welles and Shakespeare An interview about Orson Welles’s Shakespeare films and other projects includes Welles as Falstaff in Chimes at Midnight, a monumental film that incorporates portions of several history plays and The Merry Wives of Windsor.

A Midsummer Night’s Dream

Episode 134: Peter Brook  In this episode, director Peter Brook talks with us about his landmark, ground-breaking 1970 production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream.

Episode 127: Shakespeare and Opera We talk with music librarian Colleen Fay about Shakespeare and opera, including Benjamin Britten’s English-language opera, A Midsummer Night’s Dream.

Episode 65: Shakespeare in California  A conversation about Shakespeare in the American West includes the Warner Bros. Hollywood classic A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1935).

Episode 90: Bernard Cornwell: Fools and Mortal Best-selling historical novelist Bernard Cornwell talks about his book Fools and Mortals, featuring Shakespeare’s younger brother Richard, which centers on the staging of A Midsummer Night’s Dream.

Still Dreaming: Shakespeare with Seniors. A documentary follows the production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream with residents from the Lillian Booth Actors Home, an assisted living facility outside New York City that includes retired Broadway professionals.

Episode 123: Casey Wilder Mott and Fran Kranz on their LA Midsummer Director Casey Wilder Mott and co-producer and actor Fran Kranz discuss their version of A Midsummer Night’s Dream set in the modern film industry.

Much Ado About Nothing

Episode 86: Tang Xianzu and Shakespeare in China A discussion of Shakespeare in China includes a production of Much Ado About Nothing that was produced before, then recreated after, the Cultural Revolution.

Episode 133: Kenny Leon on Much Ado About Nothing We talk with Kenny Leon, founding artistic director of True Colors Theatre Company, about his Shakespeare in the Park production of Much Ado About Nothing, set in a wealthy black suburb of Atlanta and starring Orange is the New Black actress Danielle Brooks.

Episode 107: Shakespeare Uncovered A discussion of the TV series Shakespeare Uncovered includes the Much Ado About Nothing episode, presented by actress Helen Hunt.

Othello

Episode 127: Shakespeare and Opera  We talk with music librarian Colleen Fay about Shakespeare and opera, including Rossini’s opera Otello.

Episode 128: Iqbal Khan A discussion with director Iqbal Khan includes his famous Royal Shakespeare Company production of Othello, in which Black actor Lucian Msamati played Iago.

Episode 19: Shakespeare in Black and White This episode includes a seminal moment in American theater: Paul Robeson as Othello on Broadway in the mid-1940s.

Episode 50: Othello and Blackface A conversation with scholars Ayanna Thompson and Ian Smith includes Smith’s influential analysis of the vital handkerchief in Othello and the role of dyed cloth to simulate blackness in Elizabethan times.

Episode 54: American Moor A one-man show by Keith Hamilton Cobb explores acting Othello—and the frustration of taking directions from an unseen white director on how to act black.

Episode 64: Q Brothers—Othello Remix An interview with the Q Brothers on their hip-hop Shakespeare adaptations includes their production Othello: The Remix.

Episode 106: Understanding Peter Sellars Scholar Ayanna Thompson and director Peter Sellars discuss several of his complex Shakespeare productions, including a 2009 production of Othello with a largely black cast, responding to Barack Obama becoming president and supposed claims of a post-racial society.

Episode 74: Tracy Chevalier: New Boy Chevalier talks about her novel New Boy, based loosely on Othello, in which a young African student enrolls in a largely white school outside Washington, DC, in the early 1970s, part of the Hogarth Shakespeare series of novels.

Pericles

Episode 131: Pericles and Mark Haddon’s The Porpoise  Mark Haddon, author of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, discusses his novel The Porpoise, a reinterpretation of Shakespeare’s play Pericles.

Episode 235: Mary Zimmerman on Adapting Ovid and Directing ShakespeareZimmerman, who directed Pericles for the Shakespeare Theatre Company, shares a favorite stage direction from that play and reflects on creating her award-winning adaptation of Metamorphoses.

Richard II

Episode 60: Shakespeare and Girlhood Among other subjects, scholar and author Deanne Williams discusses Richard II’s Queen Isabella, who in real life was a young girl, and how that might inform the character in the play.

Episode 58: Shakespeare in Solitary An interview with Laura Bate about teaching Shakespeare in prison and her book Shakespeare Saved My Life includes her use of Richard II as an imprisoned figure in Shakespeare’s plays.

Episode 151: Richard II on the Radio
Saheem Ali discusses adapting Richard II as a radio play.

Richard III

Episode 225: What Happened to the Princes in the Tower, with Philippa Langley. Langley explores evidence that Richard III was framed for the murder of his nephews.

Episode 94: Antony Sher  In a conversation about several of his past Shakespearean roles, actor Antony Sher discusses his seminal early performance as Richard III in 1984 and his published acting diary about the performance, Year of the King.

Episode 93: Dennis McCarthy and June Schlueter on the George North Manuscript In a discussion with Dennis McCarthy and June Schlueter, this episode explores how a centuries-old manuscript may have influenced several of Shakespeare’s plays, including Richard III.

Episode 3: In Search of the Real Richard III The discovery of the body of Richard III under a British parking lot made us wonder what Richard III was like—and whether Shakespeare’s fictional Richard III resembled him. Join us for a conversation with a historian and a Shakespearean as we look for the real Richard III.

Episode 166: Richard III in Prison Frannie Shepherd-Bates, founder of the Detroit Public Theatre’s Shakespeare in Prison program, discusses SIP’s newest project: a planned critical edition of Richard III that pairs Shakespeare’s text with ideas and perspectives from incarcerated women who went through the program.

Episode 210: Robert O’Hara on Directing Richard III
What’s it like to direct Shakespeare in the Park? We ask Robert O’Hara, who staged Richard III with Black Panther’s Danai Gurira in the title role.

Episode 195: Ian McKellen on Richard III, Macbeth, and Gandalf
In the second half of our two-part interview, McKellen discusses a few of his most famous roles.

Romeo and Juliet

Episode 13: When Romeo Was a Woman Learn about an acclaimed 19th-century American actress, Charlotte Cushman, who often played masculine parts and was especially known for her role as Romeo, with her sister as Juliet.

Episode 12: Romeo and Juliet through the Ages Varying versions of Romeo and Juliet and changing approaches to the parts help trace the story of Shakespeare over the centuries.

Episode 66: Juliet’s Answer In a memoir, author Glenn Dixon describes joining the Juliet Club in Verona, Italy, which answered lovelorn letters addressed to Shakespeare’s character.

Episode 80: Leonard Bernstein and West Side Story Celebrating the 100-year anniversary of West Side Story, this episode explores how Romeo and Juliet inspired the musical and the story behind its creation.

Episode 113: Olivia Hussey: The Girl on the Balcony Fifty years after Francisco Zefferelli’s Romeo and Juliet (1968) debuted, actress Olivia Hussey recalls getting the part of Juliet and filming the role that made her famous.

Episode 165: Simon Godwin on Romeo & Juliet Simon Godwin, Artistic Director of DC’s Shakespeare Theatre Company, discusses creating a new film version of the play during a global pandemic.

Episode 115: Simon Mayo: Mad Blood Stirring  Simon Mayo talks with us about his novel Mad Blood Stirring, based in part on the little-known fact that American sailors from the War of 1812 were imprisoned in Dartmoor Prison in England. Housed in racially segregated groups, a largely black cast of POWs staged plays including Romeo and Juliet.

Episode 24: Elizabethan Street Fighting A conversation about real-life street violence in Elizabethan times and stage combat in the plays highlights fencing and other fighting in Romeo and Juliet.

Episode 27: Shakespeare in Hong Kong Two films with different takes on Romeo and Juliet are part of an overview of Shakespeare in Hong Kong.

Episode 62: Shakespeare and YA Novels Ryan North discusses his YA novel inspired by Romeo and Juliet, which lets readers select what happens next.

Episode 152: Lady Romeo
Tana Wojczuk discusses her new biography of actor Charlotte Cushman.

The Taming of the Shrew

Episode 122: The Gender Politics of Kiss Me, Kate An interview explores how Kiss Me, Kate, based on The Taming of the Shrew, was reimagined for a recent production, with Will Chase, who plays Fred Graham, the Petruchio figure, and Amanda Green, the Tony-nominated lyricist and composer who wrote additional material.

Episode 138: Shakespeare and Folktales Numerous examples from The Taming of the Shrew are included in this podcast on how folktales shape and are referred to in Shakespeare’s plays.

Episode 141: Emma Smith on This Is Shakespeare In a conversation about her book This is Shakespeare, Oxford professor Emma Smith discusses several plays, including The Taming of the Shrew.

The Tempest

Episode 217: Shakespeare and the Ocean, with Steve Mentz
Take a deep dive into Shakespeare’s sea settings and oceanic metaphors with scholar Steve Mentz.

Episode 75: The Royal Shakespeare Company’s Digital Tempest  We learn how the Royal Shakespeare Company used live digital effects to portray Ariel in a 2016 production of The Tempest, working with the performance capture company The Imaginarium, in a discussion with Gregory Doran, the RSC’s artistic director, and Ben Lumsden, Imaginarium’s head of studio.

Episode 43: Shakespeare and Magic A conversation on magic and Shakespeare between scholar and editor Barbara Mowat and Teller of Penn & Teller explores a 2015 Chicago staging of The Tempest, which he co-directed, that uses stage magic.

Episode 35: Shakespeare in the Caribbean Caliban and The Tempest are recurring elements in this discussion with scholars about the long history of Shakespeare in the Caribbean.

Episode 76: Phyllida Lloyd and All-Female Shakespeare We talk with Phyllida Lloyd about the influential trilogy of all-female Shakespeare productions that she directed at the Donmar Warehouse in London, including The Tempest.

Episode 118: Harriet Walter Harriet Walter talks about the Shakespeare roles she has played, including the Lloyd-directed all-female Shakespeare trilogy; she played starring roles in each play, including Prospero in The Tempest.

Episode 141: Emma Smith on This Is Shakespeare In a conversation about her book This is Shakespeare, Oxford professor Emma Smith discusses several plays, including The Tempest.

Timon of Athens

Episode 120: Michael Kahn In an interview on his extensive directing career, Kahn discusses a production of Timon of Athens during the 1990s and an audience member’s response.

Titus Andronicus

Episode 155: Black Lives Matter in Titus Andronicus  Focusing on the character of Aaron, Scholar David Sterling Brown explores racial imagery, profiling, and violence in this bloody revenge tragedy.

Episode 20: African Americans and Shakespeare This wide-ranging episode includes the story of the extraordinary 19th-century African American star Ira Aldridge, who performed in England and Europe; he revived Titus Andronicus for the first time in 250 years to play Aaron the Moor, presented as a hero instead of a villain.

Troilus and Cressida

Episode 47: Creating Shakespeare’s First Folio The First Folio of Shakespeare includes one play, Troilus and Cressida, that was added so late to the book that it isn’t even included in the table of contents. Learn more about the behind-the-scenes story of this famous book in a conversation with scholar Emma Smith, author of The Making of the First Folio.

Twelfth Night

Episode 11: Music in Shakespeare In an interview with musicologist Ross W. Duffin about the songs in Shakespeare’s plays, we learn about his research and discoveries about the song “Come Away, Come Away Death,” from Twelfth Night.

Episode 141: Emma Smith on This Is Shakespeare In a conversation about her book This is Shakespeare, Oxford professor Emma Smith discusses several plays, including Twelfth Night.

The Two Gentlemen of Verona

Episode 23: Myths About Shakespeare In a conversation that explores famous myths about Shakespeare and the larger ideas they suggest, this episode notes that Shakespeare’s comedies frequently suggest that marriage means the end of male friendships—including in the two plays with two male characters in the title, The Two Gentlemen of Verona and The Two Noble Kinsmen, from near the beginning and the end of his career.

The Two Noble Kinsmen

Episode 67: Shakespeare and Marlowe  As Folger director Michael Witmore and scholar and editor Eric Rasmussen consider how Shakespeare and Marlowe may have contributed to the Henry VI plays, they also discuss The Two Noble Kinsmen, which Shakespeare wrote with John Fletcher.

The Winter’s Tale

Episode 72: Adapting Shakespeare A conversation with playwrights on adapting Shakespeare includes Craig Wright and his play Melissa Arctic, based on The Winter’s Tale but set in rural Minnesota.

Sonnets and other poems

Episode 137: Books and Reading in Shakespeare’s England The first known purchaser of any printed book by William Shakespeare was an Elizabethan bureaucrat, Richard Stonley, who bought Shakespeare’s long racy poem Venus and Adonis. In this conversation, learn more about him and about the books that Shakespeare himself may have owned.

Episode 136: The Early Years of Shakespeare’s Sonnets (16th and 17th centuries) In a conversation with Jane Kingsley-Smith, author of The Afterlife of Shakespeare’s Sonnets, we discuss how Shakespeare’s Sonnets have been interpreted over time and used or misused as clues to Shakespeare’s own story.

Episode 142: The Long Life of Shakespeare’s Sonnets (18th century – today) Jane Kingsley-Smith returns to share more stories about Shakespeare’s Sonnets’ tortuous history, from 18th-century editors, who didn’t like them very much, to Oscar Wilde, who employed them in his own legal defense.

Episode 197: Billy Collins on Writing Short Poems and Approaching Shakespeare’s Sonnets

Episode 167: Paul Edmondson, All the Sonnets of Shakespeare

Episode 41: Pop Sonnets What are the rules for an Elizabethan sonnet, and how can such a sonnet capture a Taylor Swift or Chuck Berry song? We sit down with Erik Didriksen, author of Pop Sonnets, to find out the answers—and learn what made him think of these sonnets in the first place.