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At last!

A magazine with all the Will in the world

SHAKESPEARE Issue 5

Golden
Virginia
Join us on a

Off trip to the


American
with Shakespeare
their Center

heads!
Shakespeare

Muse of Fire
and the Tower
of London

Two men. One epic journey.


Giles and Dan make the ultimate
Shakespeare documentary!
Shakespeare and his contemporaries returned time and again
November to the central importance of friendship, a complex relationship
that encompassed kinship, romance, eroticism and devotion
2 Read Not Dead/Rarely Played beyond death. Our Friendship season explores the theme
Damon and Pithias through !"#$%&'(%)"#$ staged readings, family events and
scholarly talks.
4 Setting the Scene
’Tis Pity She’s a Whore
18 Setting the Scene
’Tis Pity She’s a Whore
20 The Youths That Thunder
22 Shakespeare Untold
Titus Andronicus

DECember
2 Setting the Scene
’Tis Pity She’s a Whore
11 A Concert for Winter
13 Shakespeare Untold
Romeo & Juliet
16 Setting the Scene
The Knight of the Burning Pestle

january
17 Voice Studio

17 Shakespeare Untold
A Midsummer Night’s Dream
20 Setting the Scene
The Changeling
24 Voice Studio
31 Voice Studio

The season continues until April 2015. See website for full details.

#ShakespeareandFriendship
Welcome !

Welcome to Issue 5 of Shakespeare Magazine


This momentous year of 2014 draws to a close, and
with it my first nine months as a full-time Shakespeare
journalist. It’s already been quite an education, but then,
that’s exactly the point. I started the magazine so I could
learn about Shakespeare and take others along with me
for the ride. So far, the plan is working like a dream.
I can think of no finer cover stars to round off our first year than
Giles and Dan, whose wonderful Muse of Fire documentary has been
reaping new Shakespeare converts across the globe. They’ve interviewed
everyone who is anyone in their amazing Shakespearean quest. Now it’s
their turn to answer our questions...
Also this month, I had the great pleasure of hosting Shakespeare
Magazine drinks with some of our contributors in Bristol and London.
It was a chance for me to personally thank them for their excellent work
this year, and to look forward to further Shakespeare shenanigans in
2015 (including, I hope, at least one Shakespeare Magazine live event).
It just remains for me to thank Paul McIntyre, our estimable
Art Editor, without whom this enterprise would be “but a walking
shadow...”
Enjoy your magazine, and Season’s Greetings to you all.
Photo: David Hammonds

Pat Reid, Founder & Editor

SHAKESPEARE magazine 3
Contents
At last! A magazine with all the Will in the world

SHAKESPEARE Issue 5

Golden
Virginia
Join us on a

Off trip to the


American
with Shakespeare
their Center

heads!
Shakespeare

Muse of Fire
and the Tower
of London

Two men. One epic journey.


Giles and Dan make the ultimate
Shakespeare documentary!

Shakespeare Magazine
Issue Five
September 2014
Founder & Editor
Pat Reid
Art Editor
Paul McIntyre
Staff Writers
Brooke Thomas (UK)
Mary Finch (US)
Writers
Zoe Bramley
Lucy Corley
Chief Photographer
Piper Williams
Photographers
Michael Bailey
Chuck G. Barnes
Anne-Marie Bickerton
Farrows Creative
Alex Harvey-Brown
John Melville Bishop
Lauren D. Rogers
Lindsey Walters
Thank You
Mrs Mary Reid
Web design
David Hammonds
Contact Us
shakespearemag@outlook.com
Facebook
Muse of Fire 6
facebook.com/ShakespeareMagazine The Shakespeare Force is strong with these two!
Meet Dan and Giles, and prepare to be a-Mused.
Twitter

Ֆ
@UKShakespeare
Website
www.shakespearemagazine.com

4 SHAKESPEARE magazine
Contents !

This must be Tower of Sound and


the place 14 Power 24 Vision 30
Our US correspondent is In Shakespeare’s day, all roads led to Filter Theatre Company take on the
transported by Macbeth at the the Tower of London. Scottish Play in Bristol.
American Shakespeare Center.

Ֆ Ֆ Ֆ

WIN!
One of 5 copies of Station
Eleven, the thrilling post-
Apocalyptic Shakespeare novel
by Emily St. John Mandel.

Simply send an email to us at


shakespearemag@outlook.com
with ‘Station’ in the subject
line. Don’t forget to include
your name,
The Letter of Between the address and

the Law 36 lines 42 contact number.


Closing date is
The Globe’s Read Not Dead puts The Nurse’s Tale retold by novelist Wednesday 15
the plays back in their place. Lois Leveen.
January.

Ֆ Ֆ
Good luck!

SHAKESPEARE magazine 5
!Muse of Fire

Tongues o

6 SHAKESPEARE magazine
Muse of Fire !
Actors and best mates Dan Poole and Giles Terera have wowed the
world with their celebratory Shakespeare road-trip documentary
Muse of Fire=IEVWSJ½PQMRKWE[XLMWH]REQMGHYSMRXIVZMI[IZIV]SRI
JVSQKPEQSVSYWWXEVWPMOI.YHI0E[XSZIRIVEFPIEGEHIQMGWWYGLEW
,EVSPH&PSSQ2SXXSQIRXMSRERYRJSVKIXXEFPIIRGSYRXIV[MXL(EQI
.YHM(IRGL%RHRS[MX´WXMQIJSVXLIWIQSHIVRHE]7LEOIWTIEVI
)ZERKIPMWXWXSERW[IVWSQI&EVHVIPEXIHUYIWXMSRWJVSQYW

Words: Brooke Thomas

of
Fire
Giles (left) and Dan take centre
stage at Shakespeare’s Globe.
Images courtesy of Muse of Fire.

SHAKESPEARE magazine 7
!Muse of Fire

;LEX´W]SYVZIV]JMVWXQIQSV] The two actors and being noisy and this woman at the
of Shakespeare? travelled all over wedding said to my mother ‘Oh, that boy’s
the world on their
Dan: “Sitting in a classroom in Sheffield. quest to explore going to be a Shakespearean actor.’ I guess
They took us down to a room and they and understand because I was yakking. I forgot about it until
wheeled in this crummy TV that was locked Shakespeare. I came to study and thought ‘That’s an odd
down in a big steel cage. They put in – and thing for someone to say about a black kid
I can’t remember what it was – but I have in Stevenage in the early ’80s!’”
a feeling it may have been Henry V. They Dan: “I then came back to it when I was
did it quite consistently, every month or so 14, 15. It was Macbeth, I think, and it was
you’d go sit watch another one. You can’t sitting around in a circle reading two
just do that – that doesn’t mean anything. lines each. How can you possibly get an
As a result, I assumed it was something that understanding reading two lines?”
I shouldn’t like, or wouldn’t like, or I’d never
like, and I didn’t see the relevance of it.” Do you remember when that
GLERKIH#;LIR]SYHIGMHIH
Giles: “My first memory of Shakespeare XLEX]SYGSYPHLEZIE[SVOMRK
I don’t actually remember, because my relationship with, or even a love
mother told me about it. We were at a for, Shakespeare?
neighbour’s wedding. I was a page boy, my Dan and Giles: “Yeah!”
sisters were flower girls, so I was probably Giles: “I’d decided to become an actor and
three or four. I was running around did a two year BTEC course. You’d never

“It’s a film for people who feel, like us, that they were
slightly cut off from or intimidated by Shakespeare”
Giles Terera

8 SHAKESPEARE magazine
Muse of Fire !
“Young people are more than Richard, for example?
Giles: “Yeah, because all of the other
capable of receiving Henry VI in programmes we’d seen about Shakespeare
were [In boring history teacher voice] ‘In
period costume, spoken word for 1642, blah blah blah, Shakespeare was
here in a small market town’ and I’m like,
word as Shakespeare wrote it” ‘I dunno, I dunno what you’re saying.’
Even if I literally know what you’re saying,
Giles Terera the presentation puts me off. So if we
were going to be different we knew that
there’d have to be no artifice to it, it’d have
know there was anyone called Shakespeare to be as honest as possible.” [NB In 1642
from my BTEC in performing arts, the name Shakespeare had been dead for 26 years –
never came up. Then I went to drama Boring History Ed]
school, where I met Dan, and that same Dan: “We wanted it to be more accessible
year Baz Luhrmann’s Romeo and Juliet than a talking heads documentary. There’s
came out, and also Looking for Richard, Al nothing wrong with those, but they exist
Pacino’s documentary. At the same time already.”
we had a voice teacher who showed us Giles: “Look at the subject matter. The
Olivier’s films and then the penny dropped subject matter is: Shakespeare wrote in
big time for me, and I just fell in love, as lots such a way that he could speak to very
of actors do. I just drank up everything I highly literate people, but he could also
could, read it, carried books around, I knew speak to the people who’d just paid a
I wanted to do more and see more in that penny to be a groundling, or to royalty. He
world.” could speak to everyone. Therefore that’s
Dan: “I remember Henry V was the thing what we must do. This can’t be a film for the
I got caught up in. I had three friends who intelligentsia, it’s not a film for the academic
went to the first Gulf War in ’91. I was a elite. It’s a film for people who feel, like
penpal to all my friends who were in Iraq us, that they were slightly cut off from or
or Desert Storm, and the letters that came intimidated by Shakespeare.”
back were so odd I genuinely felt echoes
of the world of that play. There were People have been seriously
extremes throughout. One of them would impressed by the sheer wealth of
be calm for five paragraphs, then there’d interviews in Muse of Fire.
be a paragraph in the middle that would Giles: “All the actors that we spoke to
look like it’d been written by someone else, were really generous with their time, and
like a clown or a grotesque… It just didn’t we knew we’d only be able to use maybe
fit with anything else. It was obviously the a minute and a half of each interview in
extremes of what they were dealing with the film. Some of these people have been
coming out in a totally different way, so for talking about Shakespeare, or performing
me Henry V always had a real connection and living Shakespeare for 50, 60 years,
with people that I knew. Since then we’ve they’ve got incredible things to say. We
got other friends who’ve been in that kind were fortunate enough to see and hear
of environment, and when you talk to them that, and we knew that we wanted other
you realise that Shakespeare got those people to be able to see it. In a way it’s
themes really right.” almost… I don’t know if I can say that.”
Dan: “Yeah, you can, you can say it.”
8LIVI´WEZIV]TIVWSREPJIIPXSXLI Giles: “It’s almost more exciting than the
film – was that intentional? Were film. We’d often go to find a nugget, a clip,
you influenced by 0SSOMRKJSV for the film, and end up watching all of the

SHAKESPEARE magazine 9
!Muse of Fire
interview because what they’re saying is
so honest, rich and inspiring that you get
drawn in. So we’re working with a theatre
[Shakespeare’s Globe in London] to make
these interviews available online, for free,
for people to watch and enjoy for years to
come. There’s some really moving moments
in there.”
Dan: “The greatest thing, and it gives me
goosebumps just thinking about it, is the
lack of vanity from everyone. There was no
ego, nothing, and that’s testament to them
and how human they are.”

%RHMX´WEPWSXIWXEQIRXXS]SYV
TVSNIGX8EPOMRKEFSYX]SYVPSZISJ
Shakespeare and what it means to
you made for a relaxed and open
atmosphere.
Dan: “We hope so.”
Giles: “It’s good that people responded to
that.”
Dan: “That would have been the worst-case
scenario, if people hadn’t understood that The Muse of Fire people that made this possible, from the
we were a conduit to open up a potentially boys face the graphics, the animations, the music – Giles
difficult subject. If they’d thought that we media… composed, but we had a team – all these
(Image: Piper
were a couple of dicks – you’d have never Williams) people who gave up their time for free.
seen us again!” Venues, theatres, members’ clubs all round
London who let us shoot…”
-WXLIVIER]SRI]SY[MWL]SY´H Giles: “The actors themselves.”
MRXIVZMI[IHFYX]SYHMHR´XUYMXI Dan: “The actors themselves, camera
KIXXS# companies…”
Dan: “There’s lots. We’d have loved to All for the love of Shakespeare.
have spoken to Denzel Washington, John Giles: “That’s a good title.”
Malkovich, Laurence Olivier…” Dan: “For the Love of Shakespeare?”
Giles: “He dead.”
Dan: “What! (laughter) Helen Mirren.” 8LIWIUYIP
Giles: “There were a lot of near misses.” Dan: “Yeah.”
Dan: “Leonardo DiCaprio. We were in the Giles: “Noooooooo!”
ballpark for that happening, but these
people are all so busy.” ;LEX´W]SYVHVIEQ7LEOIWTIEVIER
Giles: “Richard Attenborough, who sadly role?
passed away. He was happy to speak to us, Dan: “Iago.”
but he was very ill at that point.” Giles: “You’d be a good Iago.”
Dan: “And Pete Postlethwaite. It was going Dan: “Or Henry V, actually.”
to happen, but sadly he passed away. Which Giles: “You’d be a good Iago because
again is a tragedy, but he left a great mark everyone trusts you and also you could
on what we have today.” absolutely slay everyone.”
Dan: “I hope you print this, because no-one Dan: [Laughs] “It would be an absolute
ever does. I just want to acknowledge the joy!”

10 SHAKESPEARE magazine
Muse of Fire !

Stars of Fire: (clockwise from top left)


Sir Ben Kingsley, Brian Cox, Geraldine
James, John Hurt, James Earl Jones, Ewan
McGregor.

SHAKESPEARE magazine 11
!Muse of Fire

…And more Stars of Fire: (clockwise from


top left) Baz Luhrmann,Tom Hiddleston,
Jude Law, Dame Judi Dench, Ralph Fiennes.

12 SHAKESPEARE magazine
! Muse of Fire

“It’s more than 400 years old, it’s not going to just come
to you. It can do, but not necessarily, so you have to do
a bit of work and meet it halfway” Dan Poole
Giles: “There’s lots of parts I’d like to play. Dan: “...You’re taking something away from
I really like Aaron the Moor in Titus. I saw them. It’s more than 400 years old, it’s not
it this year and was reminded what an going to just come to you. It can do, but not
extraordinary path that is for all of them.” necessarily, so you have to do a bit of work
Dan: “That’s actually one of my favourite and meet it halfway.”
plays, I’d love to be anyone in Titus.”
Can you sum up the whole Muse of
-J]SYGSYPHKSFEGOMRXMQIXS Fire experience in one sentence?
little Giles and little Dan, how Dan: “I know this sounds like I’m a total
would you teach Shakespeare to wanker, but it’s become the richest palette
yourselves? of colour in my life. That’s it. And it tastes
Giles: “We often ask that question!” good as well.”
Dan: “Get up and start speaking it, don’t Giles: “You’re eating paint.”
sit in a circle and read it. If you don’t Dan: “I’m basically eating paint.”
understand what you’re saying, keep Giles: “You mixed your metaphors. This
saying it. Ewan McGregor says in the film is the kind of kids we were at school... One
‘[Shakespeare] has a different taste in the sentence? It’s been the most challenging
mouth.’ You find that out by speaking it, and experience of my life, but also the most
then it starts to find a world in you, I think.” rewarding.”
Giles: “I think you’re right, but maybe Dan: “Really tiring. Really hard work,
it’s a bit weird to expect teachers to be brilliantly hard work. It doesn’t really go
able to do that. Maybe if you put actors in away, you assume that once it’s out there
each classroom they’d say ‘Right, push the it’s done, but we still have an ongoing
tables back, let’s get on our feet.’ Whereas a responsibility. Again, this sounds like I’m a
teacher, especially if they haven’t got that wanker, but we have a responsibility to be
connection with a play themselves, will an architect to the resource.”
probably teach it how they were taught it Giles: “No, we would be the night
20 years ago – sitting around in a circle. A watchmen. The architect is the one who
lot of the actors we interviewed actually builds it, we’re the ones going around with
said that the teachers should be better the torch at 5am, hearing a mouse at the
equipped, even if it’s just that one play on end of the corridor.”
the syllabus each year. What we’re battling Dan: “Like the big lock-up at the end of
is people being told that it’s ‘not for you’ Raiders of the Lost Ark.”
somehow. They say ‘You’re not going to Giles: “With cobwebs and all kinds of
understand this, Kids, so we’re going to set nasties...”

Ֆ
it in outer space and put a pop song in it.’
That’s doing the audience a disservice as
well. Young people are more than capable
of receiving Henry VI in period costume,
spoken word for word as Shakespeare Muse of Fire is available now on iTunes.
wrote it. If you tell them that ‘You’re not You can also see full-length Muse of Fire
going to get this so we’re going to dumb it interviews via Globe Player.
down and put rap in it…’” http://www.globeplayer.tv/museoffire

SHAKESPEARE magazine 13
!American Shakespeare Center

This
must be
the place
Several thousand miles away from Stratford-upon-Avon
and London, a reconstructed Blackfriars playhouse is
serving world class Shakespeare. Welcome to Staunton,
Virginia – home of the American Shakespeare Center.

Words: Mary Finch

14 SHAKESPEARE magazine
American Shakespeare Center !
American Tragedy: James
Keegan and Sarah Fallon
as the murderous King
and Queen in Macbeth
at the ASC. (Image by
Michael Bailey)

SHAKESPEARE magazine 15
!American Shakespeare Center

Above: Shakespeare Magazine’s Mary Finch outside the


Blackfriars Playhouse. Below: Mary interviews ASC
luminary Dr Ralph Cohen. (Images: Lauren D. Rogers)

16 SHAKESPEARE magazine
American Shakespeare Center !
Drive far enough through the
cornfields of Virginia and you’ll
end up in the quaint town of
Staunton. And if you resist
the allure of the bookstores,
bars and coffee shops, you’ll
come to one of the wonders
of the Shakespearean world –
the Blackfriars Theatre at the
American Shakespeare Center.
Such was the pilgrimage I made
last summer, as have many
Shakespeareans before me.
Driving into town, I must confess I
wondered if this was not the beginning of
another Shakespearean misadventure (see
previous issue for examples of my many
mishaps). Could we have taken a wrong
turn? This picturesque town seemed
more like the setting for a cliché coming-
of-age movie than a cultural hub for
Shakespeareans.
“We didn’t want an urban place,” says
company co-founder Dr Ralph Cohen,
explaining the seemingly odd choice of
location. They chose Staunton because, in
his words, “It’s a place to come, park your
car, see a lot of shows and not have to
worry about anything.” The balcony and reactions. And he was not disappointed. The
Dr Cohen’s passion for Shakespeare bursts interior of the view from the upstairs seating took my breath
Blackfriars Playhouse.
at the seams. He began talking as soon as I (Image by Lauren D. away and slapped a goofy grin on my face.
arrived, hardly waiting for the recorder to Rogers) In the scene before me, patrons
start. When he discovered that I had never milled around the precise replication of
seen the interior of the Blackfriars, he insisted Shakespeare’s indoor theatre, waiting for
on accompanying me inside, eager to see my the Wednesday evening performance to
begin. Some (like myself) gaped at the
detail in the woodwork of the performance
space, while others went to the onstage bar
“James Keegan swept between for refreshments. Some even swayed to the
music played by the actors in the loft above
extremes, portraying Macbeth’s the stage. Don’t be mistaken, though – they
were not playing period ballads, but covers
mixture of hesitancy and of pop songs, such as ‘Rolling in the Deep’
by Adele and ‘Locked Out of Heaven’ by
consuming ambition” Bruno Mars.
And the the audience itself caught my

SHAKESPEARE magazine 17
!American Shakespeare Center

18 SHAKESPEARE magazine
American Shakespeare Center !

Left: A suitably bloody


Banquo. (Image by Michael
Bailey)

This page: Macbeth gets


well and truly Macduffed.
(Image by Lindsey Walters)

SHAKESPEARE magazine 19
!American Shakespeare Center
attention. There were people with grey
hair and people with neon blue hair. There
“One Elizabethan motto
were audience members who were likely
in primary school and others who were
the ASC holds proudly
likely at university, and beyond. The power
of the Bard’s words unified this otherwise is: We do it with the
disjointed crowd.
While the diversity in the small audience lights on”
surprised me, it seems like the most natural
thing to director and co-founder Jim
Warren. “[Shakespeare] wrote for diverse stage. Such lighting allowed me to watch my
audiences,” explains Warren, “so if we do fellow audience members as much as the actors
some of the stuff that he did, we can create on stage.
that diversity because that diverse appeal The two young theatre goers sitting on
was written into the play.” the stage caught my attention as they pulled
One Elizabethan motto the ASC holds pink sweaters over their faces at the entrance
proudly is – as T-shirts for sale in the lobby of the Weird Sisters. And any feelings of
boast – “We do it with the lights on”. embarrassment over my tears for MacDuff’s
Throughout the entire performance, electric grief disappeared as soon as I cautioned a
candelabras illuminate the actors as well as the glance around and saw I was not the only one
audience. This illumination creates a unique so moved.
A performance in full
sense of community, as the reaction of fellow swing at the Blackfriars Before the start of rehearsal, Warren sent
audience members is easily seen, especially Playhouse. (Image by the actors a set of typically forthright notes.
with the audience placed on three sides of the Lauren D. Rogers) “We won’t be making Lady Macbeth one of

20 SHAKESPEARE magazine
American Shakespeare CenterA !

The Weird Sisters of


Macbeth at the ASC.
(Image by Michael Bailey)

SHAKESPEARE magazine 21
!American Shakespeare Center

the witches,” he wrote. “We won’t be The ‘Shakespeare on his counterpart, Sarah Fallon creates a
making Macbeth the Third Murderer. the Road’ team visited Lady Macbeth to match, a Lady Macbeth
We won’t have the witches costumed as Staunton on their US motivated not only by ambition, but also
tour: (l-r) Paul Prescott
cheerleaders/priests/nuns… We won’t (Warwick University), love. Together, Fallon and Keegan present
be doing a lot of things that a lot of %.0ISR 1MW½X-RG  two of Shakespeare’s greatest villains
productions do.” Paul Edmondson as two of his greatest lovers. Of course,
Refreshingly, Warren’s production (Shakespeare their love proves horrifically destructive –
Birthplace Trust),
remains powerfully committed simply to 1IPMWWE0ISR 1MW½X
ultimately they lose each other in exchange
telling the story with a straightforward Inc). Image by Lauren for a brief claim to a bloody crown.
aim of entertaining and challenging the D. Rogers. Even while descending into hell, there
audience. “Watching Macbeth’s descent were moments of genuine humour. In
into hell can help us to strive to never be the midst of the Porter’s monologue,
in that situation,” says Warren. “To never be immediately after the murder of Duncan,
controlled by somebody in that situation.” the actor strayed from his 400-year-old
James Keegan’s portrayal of the Scottish lines to have some fun with the audience
King swept between the extremes, lending members onstage, soliciting kisses on the
authenticity to Macbeth’s mixture of cheek and ridiculing outfit choices.
hesitancy and consuming ambition. As Through the jokes, the flashes of
violence and the moments of tragedy,
the production felt cohesive and fully
Shakespeare. For Warren, the comedy in
“Throughout the entire the tragedy is only natural. “Shakespeare’s
fun!” he says, “Even if it is the dark tragedy
performance, electric of Macbeth, there is a lot of fun in it.”

candelabras illuminate the


actors and the audience” Ֆ

22 SHAKESPEARE magazine
Tower
!History: The Tower of London

of Power
During his lifetime it was a place of living history,
a symbol of Royal authority and a much-feared
prison. But what would the Tower of London
have meant to William Shakespeare?

Words: Zoe Bramley Images courtesy Historic Royal Palaces

24 SHAKESPEARE magazine
History: The Tower of London !
“The Tower was
also a prison –
a place where
the unlucky, the
brave and the
foolish went to
suffer and die”

!
SHAKESPEARE magazine 25
!History: The Tower of London

who, along with his brother, will shortly be


swallowed up within its stone walls and
disappear from history. He’s inquisitive
and he asks Buckingham about the old
building, wondering if it was built by Julius
Caesar.
Buckingham replies that is was indeed
built by Caesar, and the reader wonders
if this is another amusing example of
Shakespeare’s dodgy grasp of history. Just
think of all those anachronistic clocks in
plays like Macbeth and Julius Caesar, not
forgetting the game of billiards in Antony
and Cleopatra. For Elizabethans, however,
the origins of the Tower were hazy.
Squatting just outside London, at the
s a City of London Tour Guide south eastern boundary, it seemed to have
sprung up at the time the Romans built
I can talk for hours about their great wall around the City. Londoners
Shakespeare and his links to did indeed know the White Tower as ‘Julius
obscure ruins hidden in secret Caesar’s Tower’.
corners of the Square Mile. The Of course, we know different. Begun
smaller and quirkier, the better. in 1078, the great stone fortress was built
to consolidate William the Conqueror’s
“See this wall? Let me tell you victory over the English and keep the
about it!” population in awe of his might. By Will’s
Shakespeare had a full, rich life in day it was a contradictory place. On one
the City. We find him in fairly ordinary hand it functioned as a tourist attraction,
places – Carter Lane, Bread Street and with visitors flocking to see fearsome
the alleyways of Blackfriars. So when the beasts such as leopards and bears at the
Editor asked me to write about the Tower royal menagerie. On the other hand, it was
of London I demurred. Surely the Tower still very much a royal palace. It was also a
yields tales of kings, queens and traitors. If prison. The Tower was a place where the
Will from Stratford ever went there it’s not unlucky, the brave and the foolish went to
recorded. What on earth would I say? suffer and die.
Shakespare himself is almost silent Most infamously, the Tower was
on the subject. But there are some where a Queen of England, Anne Boleyn,
interesting scenes in Richard III which was imprisoned and executed in 1536
could reveal something of his feelings – an incident which is most definitely
toward the fortress. In Act III, Scene I, not mentioned in Shakespeare’s late
Prince Edward speaks plainly: “I do not collaborative play Henry VIII.
like the Tower...” He is a doomed little boy In 1601, Robert Devereux, the renowned

“Most infamously, the Tower was where


a Queen of England, Anne Boleyn, was
imprisoned and executed in 1536” !
26 SHAKESPEARE magazine
History: The Tower of London !

A symbol of royal power,


the Tower was a natural
target for popular uprisings
like the Jack Cade Rebellion,
as depicted in Shakespeare’s
Henry VI, Part 2.

Dramatised by
Shakespeare
in Richard III,
the tale of the
Princes in the
Tower is one
of England’s
most poignant
legends.

After the 1605


Gunpowder Plot (which
some believe is a subtext
in Shakespeare’s Macbeth),
Guy Fawkes was tortured
in the Tower.

SHAKESPEARE magazine 27
!History: The Tower of London
“Tower diaries record the torture and
execution of Edward Arden of Warwickshire
– kinsman of William Shakespeare”
Earl of Essex, was beheaded on Tower Green drawing and quartering, this was indiscreet
for his failed uprising against Anne Boleyn’s at best. It makes me think there was never
daughter, the mighty Queen Elizabeth any actual plot, just the delusional ravings of
I. Perhaps unwittingly, Shakespeare’s a man who was widely regarded as mentally
company had played a role in the rebellion unbalanced.
by agreeing to perform Richard II at the Sadly for Edward Arden, Somerville
Globe. The rebels had asked them to dust named him as one who was involved in the
off the old classic once more and to include ‘treason’ and he too was arrested, suffering
the ‘deposition scene’ in which Richard II his grisly fate at Smithfield. Somerville was
is shown giving up his crown. In the fervid found strangled inside his cell at the Tower.
atmosphere of late Elizabethan England, Visitors to the Tower today can see
with a paranoid, ageing queen on the pitiful graffiti etched into the walls,
throne, this was controversial stuff. Essex testament to the lost souls who had short
hoped that the people would be inspired stays there prior to execution or who pined
to follow the play’s example and help him away for years, forgotten behind bars.
depose Elizabeth. Escape was not unheard of, but very rare and
That episode must have been frightening difficult. In Act I, Scene IV of Richard III
enough, but Shakespeare already had a more the imprisoned Clarence tells Brackenbury
personal connection with the horrors that of a dream in which he’d broken from the
awaited within the Tower. Tower and set sail for Burgundy. And in Act
In November 1583, Tower diaries state, IV, Scene I Queen Elizabeth calls the Tower
one Edward Arden of Warwickshire was a “rough cradle for such little pretty ones”.
tortured upon the rack. He was accused of She’s talking about the Princes in the Tower.
treason, of plotting against the Queen’s life. When Shakespeare thought of the Tower
After a show trial at the Guildhall he was it must have been with sadness and dread,
hung, drawn and quartered. knowing what had happened to Edward
This was William Shakespeare’s kinsman, Arden in there. Perhaps his near-silence
a second cousin of his mother, Mary Arden. on that most infamous building actually
The shock felt by the Shakespeare family speaks volumes. Considering he was one
must have been immense. The shame! What of the few playwrights of his age to avoid
would the neighbours say? Warwickshire was imprisonment, silence may have been the
a small world. William was only 19. Two wisest course.
years later, he disappears from sight and the

Ֆ
seven ‘Lost Years’ begin.
How had this family tragedy come
about? Edward Arden was a wealthy
gentleman with an unfortunate son-in-law,
John Somerville. Like Arden, Somerville was Zoe Bramley leads the Shakespeare Trail
Catholic in a time when penal laws made and can arrange private walks. Go to www.
life difficult and dangerous for their kind. It shakespearetrail.blogspot.com or Twitter
seems that one day the unstable Somerville @shakespearewalk to connect with her.
snapped. He set off for London, telling
everyone he met that he was going to kill For information on visiting the Tower of
the Queen. Now, in the days of hanging, London, go to www.hrp.org.uk

28 SHAKESPEARE magazine
%QEKRM½GIRXWYMXSJ
armour on display at
the Tower.

One of the
iconic buildings
of English history,
the Tower has
seen plenty of
GSR¾MGXERH
upheaval.

The Duke of
Clarence was
supposedly
drowned in a
butt of Malmsey
wine at the Tower
– another legend
perpetuated by
Shakespeare’s
Richard III.

SHAKESPEARE magazine 29
!Filter Macbeth

Following critical acclaim for their rock-and-roll comedies


Twelfth Night and A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Filter
8LIEXVILEZIRS[XEOIRSRXLIMV½VWX7LEOIWTIEVIER
XVEKIH]¯ETVSHYGXMSRSJMacbethIWTIGMEPP]JSVXLI
Tobacco Factory in Bristol. We met them to investigate
XLIMVYRMUYIP]MRZIRXMZIETTVSEGLXSXLI&EVH

Words: Lucy Corley


Images: Farrows Creative

30 SHAKESPEARE magazine
Filter Macbeth !

!"#
$%&
$%
$%'(
&'
!("$
!'"$ !
SHAKESPEARE magazine 31
!Filter Macbeth
Filter’s maverick take on
Shakespeare’s Macbeth involves
cooking up a cauldron of sound.

32 SHAKESPEARE magazine
Filter Macbeth !
As Shakespeare’s Scottish
play approaches its
bloody end, Macbeth
broods that “Life’s but
a walking shadow.”
The metaphor neatly
epitomises Filter Theatre’s
restless new production.
At less than two hours long, Filter’s
Macbeth powers through the play’s most
famous lines at an intense pace, taking
the audience through a kaleidoscopic
montage of sounds and images that seems
to be over before it’s really begun. Yet
Artistic Director Oliver Dimsdale, who also
plays the title role, asserts that this is a fairly
conservative edit by Filter’s standards.
“With other Shakespeares,” he says,
“we might find ourselves being a little bit
bolder with the cutting and the pasting.
But this particular story is just the most
tautly, brilliantly written psychological
thriller and we didn’t want to tamper with
it too much.”
This is Filter’s third Shakespeare
production. They have toured Europe with Lady Macbeth (Poppy Shakespearean text with the right amount
Twelfth Night (2007) and the UK with A Miller) meets the of respect but also the right amount of,
Midsummer Night’s Dream (2012), but audience eye-to-eye. shall we say, irreverence,” Dimsdale says. “I
Macbeth marks the company’s first venture think a piece of art should keep on creating
into tragedy. Their take on the classic had and moving. If it all has to be done exactly
the audience alternating between chuckles the way it was, then isn’t that a museum
and grimaces as Lady Macbeth drew a piece rather than a piece of art?”
target on Duncan’s chest in lipstick, and Developed at Bristol’s Tobacco Factory,
Macbeth tucked into a dead crow as if it the production exploits the theatre’s
were a hot dog. closeness between audience and
The darkly playful tone is typical of the performers to create an intimate piece that
company’s style. “We try to approach a never quite leaves the rehearsal room. The
actors drift casually onto the stage with
the houselights still up, in drab-coloured,
“Lady Macbeth is not a modern-day dress no different from the
audience’s.
psychopath, because she “It’s a conscious choice with Filter’s
Shakespeare productions to have the
has some remorse” house lights 30 percent up on the audience,
to be able to see people’s faces,” explains
Poppy Miller Poppy Miller, who plays Lady Macbeth. “The
!
SHAKESPEARE magazine 33
!Filter Macbeth
idea is that it’s available, that there’s no such
thing as ‘us and them’. We are in some way,
“Macbeth is just the most
at times, all part of Macbeth, part of the
action.”
tautly, brilliantly written
The action takes place on blocks
surrounding a pit in the centre of the stage. psychological thriller”
Here the three witches become sound
Oliver Dimsdale
technicians, the ingredients of their brew
the array of instruments and devices that
make up the sound board at the heart of all characters’ motives and fears. Radios and baby
Filter’s work. monitors hint at unknown spaces beyond the
“Our shows always have music, theatre, adding a wistful, intangible tone to the
composition and sound design at the production.
epicentre of the process,” says Dimsdale, Into this heady blend wanders
“and in this case, actually at the epicentre of Dimsdale’s philosophically ambitious
the stage. We find it absolutely freeing and Macbeth, to be haunted by the witches’
thrilling that we can concentrate on sound music. The spring reverberation unit played
design rather than necessarily a character.” by Banquo (Victoria Moseley) even has two
And it is definitely sound that calls long wires, suggestive of puppet strings.
the shots in this production. The witches’ A second force behind Macbeth is, of
concoction of tangled wires, sliders and course, his wife. “When she reads the letter
strings squeak, rumble and pulsate to create Lost in music: Oliver she goes straight into the head of the beast
a cauldron of sound that represents the Dimsdale as Macbeth. and is incredibly clear Duncan’s murder has

34 SHAKESPEARE magazine
Filter Macbeth !

to happen,” says Dimsdale. Miller’s Lady The production’s have their full impact and, Dimsdale hopes,
Macbeth alternates this flinty determination minimalist style allows encourages the audience to really listen
Shakespeare’s words to
with an unsettlingly cheerful hostess’s smile. have their full impact. and engage with the play.
“She’s not a psychopath,” says Miller, “For me, a pre-planned performance
“because she has some remorse. Macbeth can only ever go so far,” says the actor.
pre-analyses and analyses and therefore, “Just being on the line and relating to the
perhaps, doesn’t go mad. She loses her audience keeps the text as alive as possible.”
mind because it’s a very practical task for I can’t speak for the rest of the audience,
her, in some ways.” but the intensity of Macbeth looking
Miller certainly has a brisk, secretarial straight at us and commanding we “resolve
efficiency. Her sharp, straight-backed form ourselves” to kill Banquo isn’t something
even stands in for the knife in the ‘Is this a I’ll forget in a hurry. It’s this feeling of
dagger...?’ speech as Macbeth follows her, uncertainty about where the play ends
spellbound, around the stage. and life begins that is unique to Filter’s
The production’s few splashes of colour productions and integral to the company’s
come from occasional cool indigo lighting relationship with Shakespeare.
and the red grin Lady Macbeth paints on “It’s sometimes very thrilling in the creating
her husband’s face after Duncan’s murder. of a Shakespearean role to not think about
Yet this minimalist style allows the lines to what you’re going to say before you say it,”
Dimsdale reflects. “Too much ‘I’ll say the line
this way’ and you’re getting into the territory
“There’s no such thing as ‘us of something that’s artificial, when actually a
lot of the time it’s there in the line. You say the
and them’. We are all part of line and you feel the story propelling you.”

Ֆ
Macbeth, part of the action”
Poppy Miller

SHAKESPEARE magazine 35
!Historic places

The
Letter

of the
Law
36 SHAKESPEARE magazine
Historic places !

“The relationship between


the law and the theatre in
London is almost as old as the
Inns of Court themselves”

For many fans, nothing beats


the thrill of experiencing
Shakespeare in a suitably
historic venue. And now
Read Not Dead on the Road
is exploring the Bard’s links
to the legal profession at
London’s Inns of Court.

Words and images courtesy of


Shakespeare’s Globe.
Photography by Anne-Marie Bickerton
and Alex Harvey-Brown.

Actors and lawyers


perform George
Gascoigne’s 1573 play
Supposes at Gray’s Inn.

SHAKESPEARE magazine 37
!Historic places
“Storytelling is a core aspect of both the
advocate and actor. The objective is to
connect emotionally with the person
one is trying to persuade”

hakespeare’s Globe is on a quest


to stage every play known to
have been performed on the
stages of London before 1642.
Launched in 1995 by Globe
Education, Read Not Dead
brings actors, audiences and
scholars together to explore
and celebrate those plays by
Shakespeare’s contemporaries Actors rehearse Lady
Mary Wroth’s Love’s
first pastoral comedy known to be written
by a woman, and Penshurst Place is the very
via script-in-hand, play-in- Victory (c. 1620) at
location it is most likely to have been written
Penshurst Place, Kent.
a-day performances. They and first performed 400 years ago.
are not meant to be polished At the beginning of its new ‘Shakespeare
and Friendship’ season of public events,
productions, but there is a Globe Education is taking Read Not Dead
shared spirit of adventure and across the river Thames to London’s Inns
excitement for the actors and of Court for a special series celebrating the
audiences uncovering these ‘amity of the inns’.
The series launched in November with a
hidden gems. performance of The Most Excellent Comedy
Part of the project is to take these rare plays of Two The Most Faithfullest Friends
back to their historical context. Last summer, Damon and Pithias. Written around 1564 by
Love’s Victory by Lady Mary Wroth was Richard Edwards, a little-known precursor to
staged at Penshurst Place in Kent. It is the Shakespeare, this tragi-comedy celebrates true

38 SHAKESPEARE magazine
Historic places !

and virtuous friendship. Today, friendship Read Not Dead Middle Temple Hall in 1602, an event which
between the Inns and among members allows historic plays was celebrated on its 400th anniversary with
to come alive for
remains a cornerstone of Inns of Court modern audiences.
a production of the play in the same venue
culture, as lawyers from around the world by actors from Shakespeare’s Globe including
live, study and practise together in shared Mark Rylance and Stephen Fry. The Comedy
amity. of Errors is recorded to have been performed
The Inns of Court in London are the in 1594 at Gray’s Inn. Shakespeare was
professional associations for barristers in interested enough in the Inns of Court to
England and Wales. The relationship between make them the setting for Act II, Scene IV of
the law and the theatre in London is almost as Henry VI, Part 1.
old as the Inns of Court themselves. All four Iain Christie is a barrister and trained actor
– Inner Temple, Middle Temple, Lincoln’s who combines both practices. As a Bencher of
and Gray’s – are known as famous, and the Inner Temple and a member of the Inner
sometime infamous, venues for professional Temple drama society, he was involved in
as well as amateur drama. The first recorded the Globe’s previous performance of George
performance of Twelfth Night took place in Gascoigne’s Supposes there last January,
!
SHAKESPEARE magazine 39
!Historic places
Xpxppp xpx px ppx
“Modern
px pxp xpp xp xpxp
pxp xp xpp xxpp xpx
training
pxpp xppx
courses for
lawyers engage
professional
actors to teach
breathing,
posture,
presence,
and vocal
projection”

performing alongside Globe actors and his This reading of “Storytelling is a core aspect of the craft of
fellow Benchers. “The relationship between Richard Edwards’ both the advocate and actor. The advocate
1565 play Damon
the two professions extends beyond the use of and Pithias took place must always remember that his objective is
legal venues to stage historic plays,” he says, last month at Middle to connect emotionally with the person he is
“and the pleasure of lawyers entertaining their Temple Hall. trying to persuade.”
colleagues in after-dinner revels. It applies also But, as Iain explains, this transference of
to the comparative skills employed by both skills does not only travel in one direction.
professions.” “When I was at drama school,” he says, “I was
Indeed, modern training courses for young struck by the similarity between the process of
lawyers increasingly engage professional textual analysis in rehearsals and preparation
actors to teach presentation skills which focus for trial.
on breathing, posture, presence, and vocal “The actor must create a consistent back-
projection. story for their character so their performance
“I am interested in how law students can is grounded in a continuing reality. A barrister
use the drama-school techniques of narrative must build a case theory for a version of
and improvisation in their work,” says Iain. events he wishes the judge or jury to believe.

40 SHAKESPEARE magazine
Historic places !

And the processes are strikingly similar. High Court Judge who the author called “my truest friend, my
“However, whenever someone comments Sir Michael Burton worthiest kinsman.” The performance will
also took part in the
that in becoming an actor I am really just staged reading of star current Gray’s members Master Roger
doing the same job I remind them that, Supposes at Gray’s Inn. Eastman, High Court Judge Sir Michael John
whilst advocacy may at times be entertaining, Burton and Masters Charles Douthwaite and
a lawyer is engaged in a serious business. He Colin Manning.
is not there to put on a performance. Any On Sunday 1 March, Inner Temple
advocate who plays to the gallery will be given Hall will host The Troublesome Reign of
a hard time in court.” King John of England by George Peele, in
Read Not Dead at the Inns of Court will celebration of the 800th anniversary of the
continue into 2015 as part of ‘Shakespeare signing of the Magna Carta. And the final
and Friendship’. Love’s Sacrifice by John Ford reading will return to the Globe, with the
will be performed in the Great Hall at Gray’s anonymous The Faithful Friends on 19 April.

Ֆ
Inn on Sunday 15 February. The play was
dedicated to Ford’s cousin and namesake,
John Ford who was a member of Gray’s and

SHAKESPEARE magazine 41
!Interview: Lois Leveen

42 SHAKESPEARE magazine
Interview: Lois Leveen !

Between

Shakespeare’s Lines
In her novel Juliet’s Nurse, Lois Leveen takes a minor
character from Romeo and JulietERHWIXWLIV½VQP]SR
centre stage. The Oregon-based author told us what it
was like to rewrite one of Shakespeare’s greatest hits.

Interview by Mary Finch

Why did you decide to take on


Romeo and Juliet?
“It really started, specifically with the
title, Juliet’s Nurse. When the title
popped into my head I was really
excited and I went back and re-read
Left: Penny Layden
as the Nurse and the play. Though I have taught other
Ellie Kendrick as Shakespeare plays, I hadn’t actually read
Juliet in this 2009 Romeo and Juliet since high school.”
production. Image:
Shakespeare’s What was it about the Nurse that
Globe.
made you want to tell her story?
Above: Lois “The first scene when the Nurse appears
Leveen by John is also Juliet’s first scene. Juliet has eight
Melville Bishop. lines of text and the Nurse has over 60,
!
SHAKESPEARE magazine 43
!Interview: Lois Leveen

and I could see here was a woman who Lois models a glam- her own story.
wanted to tell her story. In that very first rock Shakespeare “And then there were other things I
T-shirt in a Veronese
speech we get some glimpses into Juliet’s tower.That’s Lake wanted to explore in the story. The Nurse
childhood – the day that she is weaned, Garda in the refers to Tybalt as her best friend, which
a peek at the Nurse’s husband. But most background. (Image: was striking to me because they are not
significantly the information that the Chuck G. Barnes) in a single scene together. So I wanted to
Nurse had her own daughter who was know what the nature of their relationship
born at the same time as Juliet but didn’t was like, what their friendship was like,
live. across class and gender and age lines.
“I was captivated by the idea of “I also wanted to know more about
exploring that relationship. What would it some of the other characters. You know,
be like to lose a child – the most profound when Juliet was born Lady Capulet was
and devastating loss that someone can not much older than Juliet is at the time of
experience? And then have another child the play. We know that Lord Capulet says
to love and to comfort, but also be a ‘The Lord has swallowed all my hopes but
servant in her household… she’, implying his other children.”
“So it seemed like the Nurse had a
rich story of her own. We think of her as This seems to be a polarising play.
minor and comic, but she has the third People either deeply love it or
largest number of lines in the play and she really dislike it. Why do you think
embodies the tragic as well as the comic in that is?

“We think of her as minor, but she has the third


largest number of lines in the play. She embodies the
tragic as well as the comic in her own story”
44 SHAKESPEARE magazine
Interview: Lois Leveen !
“The part of me that is a historian wants to make
sure people learn about the past in accurate ways.
The novelist in me understands character and
story needs to drive that”
Left: Another more and more in the process of writing
exhausting the novel, but I think there is often more
research trip to
Shakespeare’s Italy.
depth to the characters than we think.
And sometimes more simplicity. Romeo
Below: Lois has the and Juliet were not, for many decades,
Bard under her considered the prime roles. It was really
thumb. the Nurse and Mercutio. We get this
(Images: Chuck G.
Barnes) emphasis on star-crossed lovers, which I
think in some ways is a misunderstanding
of how much else is going on in the play.”

Shakespeare is very big and very


well-beloved. What does it feel
like to adapt his work?
“I didn’t think about what it meant to
take on the best-known playwright, and
perhaps best-known author in the English
language, and the best-known play in
“I think part of it is that it is usually the play the English language, when I began the
that people read first, assigned in school, !
usually in grade nine or ten in the US. First of
all, we were never meant to read Shakespeare.
He never would have thought of it as
something we would read – he would have
thought of it as something performed. And I
think it is chosen because it is supposed to be
relevant to teens. Although I think it is, it is
hard to see at the age.
“So people come to it because they
have to, not because they want to. Some
people fall for it dearly, more through
film – for one generation that was Zeffirelli
and for another Baz Luhrmann, and even
before that West Side Story.
“But to go back to the play, especially
with the perspective of an adult, is really a
very different thing. One of the things that
I’ve enjoyed most is that reviewers have
read the novel and then gone back to read
the play and they see in the play things
they hadn’t seen before. I hope that will be
true for most readers.”
“I’ve come to like Romeo and Juliet

SHAKESPEARE magazine 45
!Interview: Lois Leveen
project. Which maybe is an indication of
my naiveté.
“One of the things that I’ve realised
is that anytime anybody performs
Shakespeare, they are always doing an
active interpretation and adaptation.
No actor delivers the lines the same
way every day in every performance.
And there’s not much stage direction
in Shakespeare so directors are always
making staging decisions, but also often
making decisions about casting, changing
lines, cutting lines. And so this idea of
revising Shakespeare is really inherent to
Shakespeare.
“I realised the enormity of taking on
Shakespeare when I spoke at the Shakespeare
450 conference in Paris, this past April.
There were so many scholars from all over Lois channels Juliet everything from cookbooks to fashion.
the world who had spent a lifetime studying at the famous Reading up on clothing, reading up
balcony in Verona.
Shakespeare, and not just his work but his And yes, we know
on food, reading up on the religious
reception across the centuries. But I think in there’s no balcony practices.”
some ways the people who love the play, or in the play…
know the play well, particularly appreciate the (Image: Chuck G. With so much going on in the play
novel. So my paper at Shakespeare 450 was Barnes) – so many characters, conflicts,
very warmly received.” and themes – how did you decide
what to focus on and expand upon
Did your past experience of in your novel?
writing historical fiction affect “In some ways, I had to stop looking
your approach to Juliet’s Nurse? at what the core theme might be for
“Well, the novel – like the play – is set in Shakespeare, because I had to discover
the 14th century. It’s really that moment what it was for Juliet’s Nurse. There are
when Italy is beginning to move from the plot points, and certainly characters, and
Middle Ages to the Renaissance. Scholars even lines or riffs on lines, that I pull over
appreciate the kind of work the novel from Shakespeare. But it really is ultimately
can do to bring scholarly research to a Angelica’s, the Nurse’s, story.”
broader audience – and I have tried very
hard to get that right. The part of me that

Ֆ
is trained as a historian wants to make sure
that people are learning about the past
in accurate ways from my work, although
the novelist in me also understands that
character and story needs to drive that.
So it’s about the sensory experience of To read the opening chapter and order a copy of
whatever place the characters are in – Juliet’s Room, go to www.loisleveen.com

“Romeo and Juliet were not, for many decades, considered


the prime roles. It was really the Nurse and Mercutio”
46 SHAKESPEARE magazine
Contributors !

Brooke Thomas Mary Finch Our US Staff Writer is


Our UK Staff Writer is a freelance in her fourth year studying English
writer based in London. She learned to at Messiah College in central
love the bard during her BA at Royal Pennsylvania. Will first grabbed her
Holloway, University of London, and attention in secondary school and
she recently graduated from their MA hasn’t let go since – she reads, recites
Shakespeare Studies programme. You and watches Shakespeare whenever
can find Brooke on Twitter possible. Besides going on irrational
@literallygeeked where she hosts adventures to see performances with
a short story competition called her friend Alison, Mary also has a
#SmallTales every week. passion for swing dancing, dabbling
in calligraphy and tending to her

Meet thy makers...


ever-growing window garden of
succulents.

Just some of the contributors to this issue of Shakespeare Magazine

Zoe Bramley is a City of Lucy Corley has loved Shakespeare


London Tour Guide specialising in performance since watching Emma
in Shakespeare’s London and the Thompson as Beatrice in Much
Tudor City. She qualified in 2010 Ado About Nothing, and through
and then launched the Shakespeare studying English at Exeter University
Trail, a guided walk which explores she found she loved writing about it
the hidden sites associated with our too. She graduated last summer and
greatest playwright. Zoe’s fascination currently lives and works in Exeter,
with Shakespeare began after reading where aside from theatre, she enjoys
A Midsummer Night’s Dream aged singing, photography and occasional
17 and wishing she could meet Appalachian dancing. Go to
Bottom! Zoe can be contacted via www.lucycorley.wordpress.com for
www.shakespearetrail.com or find her her blogs on theatre.
@shakespearewalk on Twitter.

SHAKESPEARE magazine 47
Next issue
We hope you’ve enjoyed Issue Five of Shakespeare Magazine.
Here’s a taste of what we have coming up next time…

Sara Pascoe

!
Comedy’s golden girl stands up for the Bard.

As You Like It

!
Meet Rosalind, the smartest girl in the wood.

Anthony Del Col

!
The Kill Shakespeare co-creator gets graphic.

Andrea Chapin

!
Young Will reimagined by the author of The Tutor.

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