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The Reading Room Festival

New works inspired by and in conversation with Shakespeare

Booking and details

Get Your Pass

Dates Thu, Jan 30 – Sun, Feb 2, 2025

Venue Multiple spaces at the Folger

Tickets All-Access Pass - $125

Students receive free admission to readings and conversations, with valid ID, one half-hour before event start time.

Please note: Children under the age of 4 are not permitted.

The Reading Room Festival returns for its third year, sharing staged readings, panel discussions, workshops, and community celebrations. This festival unites artists, critics, and scholars in a celebration of creative community, as they collaboratively explore the multifaceted nature of Shakespeare’s stories. Playwrights and adaptors of Shakespeare’s works include Barry Edelstein, Emily Lyon, Reynaldo Piniella, and Whitney White.

Detailed festival schedule to be announced soon.

About the festival

The Reading Room Festival is a four-day festival of staged readings, panel discussions, workshops, and community celebrations. Shakespeare serves as a catalyst for today’s playwrightsin a collaborative community, artists, critics, and scholars unite and actively engage in creating new narratives that speak to our time. Works presented at the Reading Room Festival are each at different points of their creative journey, and a goal of the Festival is that these plays will later be staged at the Folger or regional American theaters. Several Reading Room Festival presentations have enjoyed exciting post-Festival outings. Folger Theatre commissioned and toured Our Verse in Time to Come in the spring of 2023 in honor of the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare’s First Folio, and in March 2025, Lauren M. Gunderson’s A Room in the Castle, which was first workshopped at the inaugural festival in 2023, will have its world premiere in a co-production with Folger Theatre and Cincinnati Shakespeare Company. Everything That Never Happened by Sarah Mantell opens at Baltimore Center Stage later this winter.

How to attend the festival

Individual events – $20

Individual events will be available for sale on Jan 9.

Reading Room Festival All-Access Pass – $125

Access to all staged readings, panel discussions, workshops, and community celebrations included in the Festival. Purchase your pass by Dec 31 and take advantage of our early bird pricing of $125. The price goes up to $150 starting Jan 1. Buy now

Students – Free admission to readings and conversations

Admitted free one-half hour before event start time, with a valid ID.

Meet the playwrights

Barry Edelstein

Barry Edelstein

Emily Lyon

Emily Lyon

Reynaldo Piniella

Reynaldo Piniella

Whitney White

Whitney White

Explore the plays

HENRY 6

by William Shakespeare
Adapted by Barry Edelstein

Thursday, January 30, 7:30pm

Artistic Director Barry Edelstein shares selections and commentary on The Old Globe’s process of creating Henry 6, which turns the rarely produced Henry VI, Parts I, II, and III into a thrilling two-part event. Two ruling families of England, the Yorks and the Lancasters, fight each other in a high-stakes civil war for power known as the Wars of the Roses. These adaptations include everything people love about the Bard—ingenious language, vibrant characters, breathtaking battles, and sweeping crowd scenes—as they explore the impact of national politics on individual lives. This will be followed by a post-show conversation with the creative team who will discuss their process of inviting communities into the process of adapting and performing Henry 6.

 

VALOR, AGRAVIO Y MUJER (The Courage to Right a Woman’s Wrongs) 

by Ana Caro Mallén de Soto
Presented in association with Expand the Canon

Friday, January 31, 8pm

This play is a celebration of women’s agency, written by Shakespeare’s Spanish contemporary Ana Caro Mallén de Soto. Following a scorned heroine determined to carry out a revenge tragedy-turned-comedy, this play includes hallmarks familiar to Shakespeare’s writing, including cross dressing, love triangles, swordplay, and soaring verse. Doña Leonora dresses like a man and crosses Europe to get revenge on her ungrateful ex who left her unmarriageable. Along the way, she manipulates others in her sphere causing confusion and antics – and ends up with a triumph that she deems better than any murder.

Expand the Canon researches and celebrates classic plays by historic women and gender-expansive writers — and is a call to action to produce them. They’ve partnered with and inspired more than 20 companies across the country to teach and perform these works. Find all 52 curated plays (spanning 1600-1990, 16 countries, and 11 languages) at expandthecanon.com.

 

BY THE QUEEN 

by Whitney White

Saturday, February 1, 8pm

From her roots as a provincial princess of France, to her ascension to the throne of England and her eventual downfall, Queen Margaret is one of the most complicated, fascinating, and thrilling characters in Shakespeare’s works. She is a warrior, a wife, a politician, a mother… and this dynamic new drama, lifted and remixed from the text of Henry VI and Richard III, finally gives her story the telling it deserves.

 

HAMLET

by William Shakespeare
Adapted by Reynaldo Piniella and Emily Lyon
Spanish translation by Christin Eve Cato
Additional Anishinaabe translations by Ty Defoe

Sunday, February 2, 4pm

Hamlet is a Black, Latinx prince in this bilingual reimagining of Shakespeare’s tragedy, with text infused by the Spanish spoken in present-day New York City.