April 2008
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get inside: The World of Shakespeare

April is the month in which the playwright and poet William Shakespeare (pictured) was born and baptized in 1564, as well as the month in which he died some 390 years ago. For centuries he has entertained readers and theatregoers, helping us see our commonalities and revealing our humanness. Though they were written centuries ago, his tender scenes of reconciliation, such as that between Lear and Cordelia, continue to break hearts in the 21st century. The themes of his love stories, such as Romeo and Juliet, are as fresh and universal today as they were when he wrote them, words he coined are an intrinsic part of the English vocabulary, and his works have been translated worldwide. So just why does Shakespeare stand out so far among his contemporaries? What makes his speech so compelling? Where did he obtain his depth of understanding and wit? Learn more about the clever bard in Encyclopædia Britannica's Guide to Shakespeare.



People and Places
Explore the early influences of Shakespeare's life and work, including:
 
Stratford-upon-Avon (pictured), his birthplace
The Globe Theatre, his professional home
Anne Hathaway, his wife
Lord Chamberlain's Men, his theatrical company
Shakespeare's Best-loved Plays
Revisit the works of the man considered by many to be the greatest dramatist of all time, including:
 
King Lear (pictured)
Hamlet
Othello
Macbeth
Antony and Cleopatra
The Tempest
Shakespearean Actors
Meet a collection of actors and actresses who honed their theatrical talents through Shakespearean plays, such as:
 
Laurence Olivier (pictured)
John Gielgud
Peggy Ashcroft
Kenneth Branagh
Claire Bloom
Sarah Bernhardt
Ian McKellen
John Barrymore

 
William Kempe, a famous clown and an original member of the Lord Chamberlain's Men (the company to which Shakespeare belonged), specialized in the comic roles that are often interwoven throughout Shakespeare's plays.

Inside Blog
Ovid, the Great Poet of Spring
By Gregory McNamee

It’s unfortunate that one of the greatest poets of change, Publius Ovidius Naso, is so little read today, for Gregor Samsa—and perhaps even the Terminator—would have found a happy place in the pages of the magisterial poem we know as The Metamorphoses. Ovid’s huge catalog of evolving forms influenced… (read more)


The Britannica Blog is a place to share smart, lively conversations on just about any topic.

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Julius Caesar muses to Mark Antony about Cassius, “Let me have men about me that are fat” (Julius Caesar, Act I, scene 2).
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Hamlet confronts his mother and mistakenly kills Polonius (Hamlet, Act III, scene 4).
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