Two and a half years. It’s been almost a thousand days since I’ve last set foot on European soil, the longest I’ve been away from here in my entire life, and boy is it nice to be back, even though the Covid numbers in Germany are exploding and, thanks to flight delays and rebookings, I […]
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To celebrate, or mourn, World Theatre Day, I thought I’d start a list of theatres that are doing things online now to give us, and them, something to keep at least a memory of live performance alive. Others have made similar lists, and I’ll include links to those as well — and I’ll keep updating […]
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Peter Stein, in 1981, on acting:
Actors — all actors — naturally tend to protect their characters. As far as I’m concerned, an actor who wouldn’t do that would be seriously compromised. So you [as a director] need to find a way of balancing that tendency. The actor has to work through the dark […]
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My book, Theatre and Testimony in Shakespeare’s England: A Culture of Mediation, has just been published by Cambridge University Press in the UK; by January, it will be out in the US and Canada as well. CUP have made some excerpts available on their […]
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Larry Cebula, a historian at Eastern Washington University who blogs at Northwest History, is telling keen undergrads they should not go to grad school, because they won’t get a job anyway: “The reason you are not going to be a professor is because that job is going away, and yet doctoral programs continue […]
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As I argued in a post last week, academic Shakespeareans need to confront those who make it their mission to convince the public that Shakespeare didn’t write the plays Shakespeare wrote. We can’t afford to ignore these claims, lest we appear scared, indifferent, or silently consenting. But unlike some of my colleagues, I think […]
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This is a post-script of sorts to my review of Stephen Marche’s How Shakespeare Changed Everything. Go read that post if you haven’t yet.
Two days ago, I gave voice to my increasing frustration with Marche’s book. Like so:
Yesterday, as I was working on my review, I received an email response […]
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If you spend your life working on Shakespeare, sooner or later someone’s going to pop the question: “Did he really write the plays?”
If you are a serious, textual-studies minded Shakespearean, you might respond with something along these lines: “Well. Probably not all of them on his own. He only collaborated on 1 Henry VI, and […]
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Holger Syme's work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License.Images may be reused as long as their source is properly attributed in accordance with the Creative Commons License detailed above. Many of the photos here were taken at the Folger Shakespeare Library; please consult their policy on digital images as well.