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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.

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.

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

Drawing Shakespeare: Macbeth

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Paul Glenshaw

Artist Paul Glenshaw describes drawing John Gregory’s bas-relief of Macbeth, the three witches, and their cauldron, with a focus on the vast cloud of smoke made from stone. “I realized as I drew it that the smoke was as much…

Excerpt - 'How to Behave Badly in Elizabethan England' by Ruth Goodman
Shakespeare and Beyond

Excerpt - 'How to Behave Badly in Elizabethan England' by Ruth Goodman

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Shakespeare & Beyond

From rudeness to gross behavior, Ruth Goodman’s book “How to Behave Badly in Elizabethan England” sheds some surprising light on what bad behavior really meant, including the reason that Shakespeare had Sampson threaten to “bite my thumb” at another character…

Thine Own Self
Aaron Krohn as Touchstone, in green with guitar, in As You Like It, Folger Theatre, 2017. Photo by Teresa Wood.
Shakespeare and Beyond

Thine Own Self

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Austin Tichenor

From the question “What are you?” (Countess Olivia) to “Tell my story” (Hamlet), Austin Tichenor looks at finding your identity and telling your story, through a decidedly Shakespearean lens.

Shakespeare theaters stage 'A Christmas Carol'
Shakespeare and Beyond

Shakespeare theaters stage 'A Christmas Carol'

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Ben Lauer

Are there similarities between staging Dickens’s ‘A Christmas Carol’ and putting on the Shakespeare plays that are these companies’ bread and butter? We asked our theater partners.

Excerpt - 'Decorating a Room of One's Own' by Susan Harlan
Susan Harlan,
Shakespeare and Beyond

Excerpt - 'Decorating a Room of One's Own' by Susan Harlan

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Shakespeare & Beyond

A detailed but absurd decor chat with Lady Macbeth is one of Susan Harlan’s many hilarious design interviews with literary figures in her new book “Decorating a Room of One’s Own.”

Play on! Tracy Young on translating 'The Winter's Tale'
Scenes from The Winter's Tale. Owen Jones. 19th century. Folger Shakespeare Library.
Shakespeare and Beyond

Play on! Tracy Young on translating 'The Winter's Tale'

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Shakespeare & Beyond

Tracy Young, who had previously directed “The Winter’s Tale,” writes about the challenges of translating “The Winter’s Tale” for the Play on! project.

Exploring Churchill's Shakespeare
Churchill's Shakespeare opening. Allen Packwood, Georgianna Ziegler, Robert Costa. (c) Yassine El Mansouri Photography
Shakespeare and Beyond

Exploring Churchill's Shakespeare

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Shakespeare & Beyond

Enjoy a discussion led by Washington Post journalist Robert Costa, moderator of Washington Week, with Georgianna Ziegler, curator of Churchill’s Shakespeare, and Allen Packwood, director of the Churchill Archives Centre, exploring Shakespeare’s influences on Winston Churchill.

Was it the first Shakespeare film? The silent King John
Herbert Beerbohm Tree as King John in King John by William Shakespeare. Oil on canvas. Charles Buchel, 1900. Victoria and Albert Museum.
Shakespeare and Beyond

Was it the first Shakespeare film? The silent King John

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Michael Anderegg

With Herbert Beerbohm Tree as the king, the four-minute silent movie “King John” (1899) is often called “the first Shakespeare film,” as Michael Anderegg explains. Watch the surviving one-minute fragment and learn more about its theatrical star.

Eight Christmas gift ideas for Shakespeare fans
Shakespeare and Beyond

Eight Christmas gift ideas for Shakespeare fans

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Shakespeare & Beyond

We’ve got eight Shakespeare-related Christmas gift ideas from the Folger shop, most of them under $30 and some under $15, from books and jewelry to a bath duck and more.

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