Sheldrake on Shakespeare artwork

Sheldrake on Shakespeare

57 episodes - English - Latest episode: 10 months ago - ★★★★★ - 13 ratings

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Episodes

Hamlet – Is anything original?

May 30, 2023 13:12 - 17.5 MB

In the first of two episodes on this mightiest of plays, Sheldrake compares the plot of Shakespeare’s Hamlet with its sources, uncovering a tremendous amount of ‘literary upcycling’ but also a profound and imaginative tribute to the power of theatre at the play’s core. First preview of Sheldrake on Shakespeare: Live! THIS FRIDAY 2nd June, […]

A Midsummer Night’s Dream – Why so popular?

April 23, 2023 11:10 - 17.9 MB

In his return to the airwaves, Sheldrake considers the extraordinary popularity of A Midsummer Night’s Dream and concludes that it is the dark matter in the middle of this festive comedy sandwich that makes the play such a satisfying experience overall. iTunes Amazon Sheldrake on Shakespeare Live! London previews: Etcetera Theatre 2nd June Rosemary Branch […]

Henry V – The Play, The Myth, The Legend

February 24, 2019 17:50 - 14.9 MB

Henry V: one of the most patriotic characters and plays in all of literature, surely? Not so, says Sheldrake. Henry V and his world are thoroughly morally ambiguous. Also available on iTunes: http://tinyurl.com/ndhzfxm

Henry IV Part 2 – Learning to Play

July 13, 2015 23:58 - 12.6 MB

How did people learn to act in the Renaissance? Did the texts themselves co-operate in teaching newish actors how to do certain things? Sheldrake thinks so.

Short SoS – The Folger Institute

June 29, 2015 09:55 - 4.34 MB

Amongst the Palladian architecture of Washington DC there lies a grey stone block, the Folger Institute. Its vaults house the largest single collection of Shakespeare First Folios anywhere in the world and it is a hub of scholarly activity. After a recent holiday to Washington, Sheldrake talks you through it. Also available on iTunes: http://tinyurl.com/ndhzfxm

Henry IV, Part 1 – History and Personality

June 15, 2015 21:25 - 13.5 MB

What to say about Henry IV Part 1? In the first of three main episodes, each of which will tackle one play in this Henriad, Sheldrake explores a play about history and personality, focussing on Prince Henry and his rival for glory Harry Hotspur. Also available on iTunes: http://tinyurl.com/ndhzfxm

Short SoS – Teaching Shakespeare

June 01, 2015 15:35 - 5.73 MB

He claims no monopoly on wisdom in this area, but as an academic year draws to a close and the long vacation heaves into view, Sheldrake reflects on his experiences of teaching Shakespeare. Also available on iTunes: http://tinyurl.com/ndhzfxm

Troilus and Cressida – Shakespeare’s Ugliest Play

May 18, 2015 20:47 - 16.9 MB

We associate Shakespeare with humanity, warmth, generosity and kindness when he writes about people who have made a wrong decision. Even Richard III at the beginning of his play tells us what a dreadful life he’s had until now. Troilus and Cressida is different. Shakespeare is merciless with his characters and shows the Trojan War […]

Short SoS -Shakespeare and Evil

May 04, 2015 06:37 - 10.5 MB

Thanks to a couple of nearby anniversaries, we are hearing more than ever not only what great theatre Shakespeare is, but also what a positive influence he is. By and large, this is true. But the commemorative coin has another side, which is Shakespeare’s repeated mobilisation by fascists, racists and regimes we despise. Firstly, this […]

The Tempest – Infinite Variety

April 20, 2015 23:18 - 13.4 MB

The Tempest is a difficult play to nail down. It is also the most reinterpreted and adapted of Shakespeare’s plays. In this episode, Sheldrake pursues three themes – Love, Power and Art – and examines how they have been reinterpreted over the centuries. Also available on iTunes: http://tinyurl.com/ndhzfxm

Short SoS – Sheldrake on Jonson

April 06, 2015 19:34 - 7.35 MB

Ben Jonson. Rival or friend of Shakespeare? Grumpy old bore or stout moralist? In a typical cop-out, Sheldrake thinks both caricatures are true. Jonson is an awkward playwright at the best of times, but his plays are well worth the seeing. Sheldrake gives you his personal top three. Also available on iTunes: http://tinyurl.com/ndhzfxm

The Merchant of Venice – Is it worth it?

March 23, 2015 22:10 - 14.3 MB

We seem to spend much of our lives asking whether things are worth it. Are they worth the money, the time, the effort? Are we getting value for money? Is something worth it? And everybody in The Merchant of Venice seems to be asking that kind of question too. Venice itself seems to be all […]

Second Thoughts about Measure for Measure @ RADA

March 09, 2015 23:20 - 6.61 MB

A few weeks ago I was lucky enough to be leading a seminar at RADA on Measure for Measure. In preparing for that seminar I found myself disagreeing with much of what I said in my own podcast episode on the play. So here I rebut and refute many of my earlier claims. One of […]

Othello – Perspective

February 23, 2015 12:24 - 13.4 MB

It’s difficult to know what, and particularly who, to talk about in Othello. Iago is a distraction, Othello likes to inflate his own sense of himself, whilst Desdemona can seem even less than she is. Which is odd, because the characters too find themselves not quite knowing how to interpret what they see in front […]

Short SoS – Falstaff Again

February 09, 2015 11:47 - 9.17 MB

Falstaff will exceed the bounds of whatever box you try to put him in, a truth I found out for myself in the last Short Sheldrake on Shakespeare. I return to complete some unfinished business on this occasion, finishing off some remarks about why Falstaff is so popular in the Henry IV plays and giving […]

Twelfth Night – Play on

January 26, 2015 23:04 - 17 MB

Twelfth Night seems to be everyone’s favourite Shakespeare play. Why is this the case? Could it be something to do with the fact that it is a play about playing? This play is a hymn to the pleasure and virtue of playing and play wins over anti-play, though of course the real motto is that […]

Short SoS – Why is Falstaff so popular?

January 12, 2015 22:49 - 7.21 MB

Sir John Falstaff is a river who has burst his banks. He has taken on a life beyond Shakespeare’s plays and become a myth in his own right. Anybody who has a thirst for life is described as Falstaffian, he has had operas written for him, actors at the mature height of their comic powers […]

King Lear and Service

December 16, 2014 00:44 - 14.9 MB

King Lear is a work of obvious genius, so what to say about it in fifteen minutes that can illuminate it? Using the historical idea of service, and the relationship between service and – believe it or not – love, we can get a handle on all sorts of relationships in the play. And Sheldrake […]

Short SoS – ShakespeaRe-told by the BBC

December 01, 2014 22:37 - 9.38 MB

The BBC has had its ups and downs with Shakespeare. One insufficiently well-known up was its series of Shakespeare adaptations broadcast in 2005. In this episode, Sheldrake reviews the set of four ninety-minute adaptations featuring such actors as James McAvoy, Billie Piper, Damian Lewis, Keeley Hawes, Rufus Sewell, Imelda Staunton and Jonny Vegas that would […]

Sheldrake on Shakespeare Special – Amity with Globe Education

November 18, 2014 15:02 - 23.4 MB

Globe Education is launching its new season, a rich array of theatrical and academic events culminating in a two-day conference next April. Sheldrake went along to the Globe to interview Dr Will Tosh to talk about the theme of the season, namely Amity, and some of the upcoming events, including performances at the Inns of […]

Another Announcement

November 11, 2014 20:19 - 936 KB

Regular broadcasting will resume on Monday 17th November, featuring an interview with Dr Will Tosh from Globe Education. Subsequent episodes, selected from the same formats as in the good old days of Sheldrake on Shakespeare, will be uploaded every other Monday thenceforth. Also available on iTunes: http://tinyurl.com/ndhzfxm

Announcement

October 21, 2014 09:01 - 887 KB

Hello there. The astute among you will have noticed that there has been something of a pause, a hiatus if you will, in the stream of episodes for this podcast. There is no cause for alarm. I am merely taking a short break to engage in some serious research, both for this project and for […]

Short SoS – Performance History

October 05, 2014 08:34 - 7.13 MB

We all have an image in our mind’s eye of Shakespearean performance during Shakespeare’s lifetime, but what happened between then and now? Why didn’t the Restoration court like Shakespeare? Who is David Garrick? For answers to all these questions and more, seek no further. Also available on iTunes: http://tinyurl.com/ndhzfxm

Short SoS – Genre

September 28, 2014 13:51 - 6.32 MB

This is not the first time genre has been used as a critical tool for understanding Shakespeare’s process and plays, but Sheldrake – never one to dismiss an idea merely because it has been heard before – draws together some big ideas about comedy and tragedy and shows the way that Shakespeare messes about with […]

The Two Gentlemen of Verona – Reading across plays

September 21, 2014 12:08 - 16.5 MB

The Two Gentlemen of Verona is not a play many people have read. Though were they to read it, they might think they have, because it reads like an anthology of Shakespeare in the 1590s. Sheldrake takes the opportunity to hold the mirror up to comedy by reading in parallel with Romeo and Juliet, Love’s […]

Short SoS – Review – The Genius of Shakespeare by Jonathan Bate

September 12, 2014 15:37 - 7.23 MB

In a new Book Review format designed to highlight a few critical classics to add to the shelves, Sheldrake outlines the relative merits of Professor Jonathan Bate’s acclaimed 1997 book The Genius of Shakespeare. Also available on iTunes: http://tinyurl.com/ndhzfxm

Short SoS – Shakespeare the Magpie

September 05, 2014 17:00 - 6.9 MB

Shakespeare nicked stuff from everywhere; prose narratives, history books, other plays. Sheldrake rattles through a few of the old chestnuts and a few of the lesser-known borrowings, showing Shakespeare as a great adapter of stories. Subscribe on iTunes: http://tinyurl.com/ndhzfxm

Measure for Measure – A society play

August 31, 2014 16:19 - 15.4 MB

In a resumption of normal service that is perhaps not quite the triumphant return he would like, Sheldrake confesses himself drawn more to the ideas of Measure for Measure than its drama. The discussions of Virtue and Justice in the play are strikingly front and centre, and the social aspects of these philosophical ideas form […]

Short SoS – Shakespeare al fresco

August 02, 2014 18:23 - 6.67 MB

A very great number of Shakespeare performances in Britain are conducted by amateur companies. People gathering together to do Shakespeare for fun. The open-air festival is a particularly popular brand of this. Sheldrake has been involved with the Pendley Shakespeare Festival for some time, and from this year’s Festival he uncovers the meanings of Shakespeare […]

Short SoS – Sheldrake on Marston

July 26, 2014 17:02 - 9.15 MB

Testing the patience of listeners once again by talking about someone who isn’t Shakespeare, Sheldrake investigates the peculiar career of John Marston; satirist, dramatist, tragicomedian. He had some great successes, then there was a bit of a lean patch, then he appears to have thrown in the towel. Why? In one word – tragicomedy. Also […]

Short SoS – Sheldrake on Marlowe

July 20, 2014 15:52 - 7.99 MB

Sheldrake decides to put his money where his mouth is regarding Shakespeare’s contemporaries. Why should we care about Marlowe, both on his own terms and in relation to Shakespeare? Also available on iTunes: http://tinyurl.com/ndhzfxm

Julius Caesar and the Soliloquy

July 12, 2014 11:23 - 17.2 MB

The soliloquy is one of Shakespeare’s most recognisable and distinctive theatrical devices. It is in no small part responsible for his fame as a dramatist of human psychology. Was Julius Caesar the gateway in Shakespeare’s soliloquising art between the 1590s and the 1600s? Sheldrake takes a close look at a few speeches from the play. […]

Short SoS – Play Dates

July 05, 2014 11:01 - 7.99 MB

How do we know when Shakespeare wrote each of his plays? Well, there are several methods of dating a play. Sheldrake rattles through them, taking in a couple of 1590s Michael Billingtons along the way. Also available on iTunes: http://tinyurl.com/ndhzfxm

Sheldrake on Shakespeare Special – Read Not Dead at Shakespeare’s Globe

June 27, 2014 13:04 - 23.2 MB

For many years, Globe Education has been staging performances with scripts of the plays of Shakespeare’s contemporaries in a series called Read Not Dead. They have worked their way through over 200 plays, but the opening of the Sam Wanamaker Playhouse means they now have a permanent and splendid home. To decide which play should […]

Short SoS – Rehearsal and Performance

June 20, 2014 18:27 - 7.28 MB

Attempts to reconstruct the original performance circumstances of Renaissance plays, either literally or imaginatively, have been a constant companion to fascination about the literature. How did these plays actually get put together? What was the process? Would the actors recognise the concept of a rehearsal process? Sheldrake investigates. Also available on iTunes: http://tinyurl.com/ndhzfxm

Short SoS – The Drama of the Sonnets

June 14, 2014 14:37 - 8.06 MB

Shakespeare’s Sonnets are things you nearly always read alone. But there is a rich seam of drama and conversation to be mined from them, as Sheldrake found recently when he saw them read aloud at the Royal Festival Hall. Subscribe on iTunes: http://tinyurl.com/ndhzfxm

Short SoS – Shakespearean Theatres

June 06, 2014 12:00 - 8.44 MB

Where did the magic happen? We’ve all heard of the Globe, but what did it mean for a play to be written for one playhouse rather than another? And what, for that matter, did it mean for Shakespeare to be attached to the Globe for most of his career? Sheldrake gallops through some answers. Subscribe […]

The Taming of the Shrew – Sexist drivel or a play for our time?

May 31, 2014 15:18 - 12.2 MB

As social politics continue to change with gathering speed, works of literature have to catch up or fall by the wayside. The plays of Shakespeare, written in a very different age from our own, must be scrutinised. Does this play, a notorious battle of the sexes, pass the test? Sheldrake thinks so. Subscribe on iTunes: […]

Short SoS – What use is Shakespeare criticism?

May 24, 2014 14:42 - 5.6 MB

Turning introspective for a moment, Sheldrake considers what value Shakespeare criticism can be said to have. Subscribe on iTunes: http://tinyurl.com/ndhzfxm

Short SoS – Review – Titus Andronicus at the Globe

May 17, 2014 14:37 - 6.14 MB

The current production of Titus Andronicus at the Globe Theatre in London has the sort of theatrical courage that all Globe productions, indeed all Shakespeare productions, should have. Much like the play, this production takes risks, and they pay off big time. Subscribe on iTunes: http://tinyurl.com/ndhzfxm

Richard II – History or Tragedy?

May 10, 2014 12:30 - 14.7 MB

Richard II has grown in fame in recent years, but is hounded by the fact that the central character is brilliant whilst the rest of the play is the usual run-of-the-mill History drama. But is it that simple? By paying closer attention, can we see that the true genius of this play is in its […]

Short SoS – Venus and Adonis

May 02, 2014 22:24 - 5.31 MB

The poetry of Shakespeare tends to be an “also-ran” in his canon, but Venus and Adonis tells us as much about his development and abilities as any of the plays. Also available on iTunes: http://tinyurl.com/ndhzfxm

Love’s Labour’s Lost – Four-mality

April 25, 2014 22:03 - 13.8 MB

Form is almost absent from the modern critical radar, which has put Love’s Labour’s Lost on the back burner. In a courageous rear-guard action, Sheldrake tries to demonstrate the formal beauty of Love’s Labour’s Lost, and explains why that formal beauty matters. Also available on iTunes: http://tinyurl.com/ndhzfxm

Short SoS – King’s Man

April 19, 2014 10:05 - 5.89 MB

In Part 2 of 2, Sheldrake outlines the effect that James I may have had on Shakespeare’s political and artistic direction. Also available on iTunes: http://tinyurl.com/ndhzfxm

Timon of Athens – Shakespeare and the City

April 12, 2014 21:57 - 12.8 MB

London was growing up fast in Shakespeare’s day. Whether you’re familiar with Shakespeare or not, Timon of Athens seems a very peculiar play. But armed with some context, its connection with Renaissance finance and city drama become apparent. Also available on iTunes: http://tinyurl.com/ndhzfxm

Short SoS – Queen’s Man

April 05, 2014 10:22 - 5.03 MB

In Part 1 of 2, Sheldrake outlines the effect that the presiding monarch may have had on Shakespeare’s political and artistic direction. Also available on iTunes: http://tinyurl.com/ndhzfxm

The Merry Wives of Windsor – Words, Words, Words

March 29, 2014 14:12 - 14.3 MB

The Merry Wives of Windsor is devoid of ideas, so let’s talk about language instead. And hear Sheldrake play five parts in fifteen minutes. Also available on iTunes: http://tinyurl.com/ndhzfxm

Short SoS – Shakespeare at School

March 21, 2014 12:21 - 6.14 MB

If you think Shakespeare was a purely natural genius, the words spilling out from a free spirit of a mind, think again. Shakespeare’s rigorous education at school primed him in all sorts of crucial ways for his later career. Sheldrake explains how at breakneck speed. Also available on iTunes: http://tinyurl.com/ndhzfxm

Henry VIII – Master and Apprentice

March 15, 2014 12:05 - 14.3 MB

Henry VIII is a little known play, but it bears witness to John Fletcher’s apprenticeship to William Shakespeare. And perhaps it’s not that bad a play after all. Also available on iTunes: http://tinyurl.com/ndhzfxm

Short SoS – Costume Matters

March 07, 2014 14:19 - 5.67 MB

The scarcity of scenery on Shakespeare’s stage does not mean that there were no impressive visual effects. One way of awing an audience was with fine costume. As a primer to the full Henry VIII episode next week, Sheldrake describes the impact of costume in two scenes from that play. Also available on iTunes: http://tinyurl.com/ndhzfxm