Applied Shakespeare graduate certificate /asmagazine/ en All the world’s a stage for William Shakespeare /asmagazine/2025/11/26/all-worlds-stage-william-shakespeare <span>All the world’s a stage for William Shakespeare</span> <span><span>Kylie Clarke</span></span> <span><time datetime="2025-11-26T14:32:57-07:00" title="Wednesday, November 26, 2025 - 14:32">Wed, 11/26/2025 - 14:32</time> </span> <div> <div class="imageMediaStyle focal_image_wide"> <img loading="lazy" src="/asmagazine/sites/default/files/styles/focal_image_wide/public/2025-11/Hamnet%20scene.jpg?h=d1cb525d&amp;itok=19mmDmok" width="1200" height="800" alt="Hamnet scene"> </div> </div> <div role="contentinfo" class="container ucb-article-categories" itemprop="about"> <span class="visually-hidden">Categories:</span> <div class="ucb-article-category-icon" aria-hidden="true"> <i class="fa-solid fa-folder-open"></i> </div> <a href="/asmagazine/taxonomy/term/30"> News </a> </div> <div role="contentinfo" class="container ucb-article-tags" itemprop="keywords"> <span class="visually-hidden">Tags:</span> <div class="ucb-article-tag-icon" aria-hidden="true"> <i class="fa-solid fa-tags"></i> </div> <a href="/asmagazine/taxonomy/term/1314" hreflang="en">Applied Shakespeare graduate certificate</a> <a href="/asmagazine/taxonomy/term/58" hreflang="en">Books</a> <a href="/asmagazine/taxonomy/term/182" hreflang="en">Colorado Shakespeare Festival</a> <a href="/asmagazine/taxonomy/term/320" hreflang="en">English</a> <a href="/asmagazine/taxonomy/term/284" hreflang="en">Film Studies</a> <a href="/asmagazine/taxonomy/term/510" hreflang="en">Literature</a> <a href="/asmagazine/taxonomy/term/184" hreflang="en">Theatre and Dance</a> <a href="/asmagazine/taxonomy/term/448" hreflang="en">Women and Gender Studies</a> </div> <span>Alexandra Phelps</span> <div class="ucb-article-content ucb-striped-content"> <div class="container"> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--article-content paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div class="ucb-article-content-media ucb-article-content-media-above"> <div> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--media paragraph--view-mode--default"> </div> </div> </div> <div class="ucb-article-text d-flex align-items-center" itemprop="articleBody"> <div><p class="lead"><em><span>With the Nov. 26 cinematic release of Hamnet, CU Boulder scholars consider what we actually know about the famed playwright and why we’re still reading him four centuries later</span></em></p><hr><h4><strong>Act One: Setting the scene</strong></h4><p>“Friends, Romans, countrymen, <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/56968/speech-friends-romans-countrymen-lend-me-your-ears" data-entity-type="external" rel="nofollow">lend me your ears.</a>” The legacy and legend of William Shakespeare has expanded well beyond the open-air theaters of Renaissance London. Embedded in classrooms, films and novels, his plays and poetry have become universally known and loved. Before he inspired generations of artists, however, he was inspired by the art around him. Adapting the stories and dramas he observed and experienced, his storytelling has entertained viewers and readers for four centuries.</p><p>However, his dramas are mostly what we have left of him.</p><p>“The wealth of beautiful and deep feeling poetry and drama that Shakespeare left, contrasted with the poverty of documents that give us a sense of who he is as a person, is very intriguing” explains <a href="/english/dianne-mitchell" data-entity-type="external" rel="nofollow">Dianne Mitchell</a>, a assistant professor of <a href="/english/" data-entity-type="external" rel="nofollow">English</a> and Renaissance literature scholar. This poverty has led scholars and writers, including bestselling author <a href="https://www.maggieofarrell.com" data-entity-type="external" rel="nofollow">Maggie O’Farrell</a>, to imagine what the lives of Shakespeare and his family may have been like.</p><p>In her 2020 novel <a href="https://www.maggieofarrell.com/titles/maggie-ofarrell/hamnet/9781472223821/" data-entity-type="external" rel="nofollow"><em>Hamnet</em></a>, a film adaptation of which will be released in theaters today (Nov. 26), O’Farrell weaves a plot following Shakespeare and his wife – referred to in the novel and film as <a href="https://www.waterstones.com/blog/maggie-ofarrell-on-the-significance-of-names-in-hamnet" data-entity-type="external" rel="nofollow">Agnes</a> – and their children, twins Judith and Hamnet and their older sister Susanna, creating a domestic view of their lives in Stratford. Based on the sparse information about Shakespeare available through legal documents, O’Farrell spins a fictional tale of loss, love and the family of one of the world’s most influential playwrights.</p><div class="ucb-box ucb-box-title-left ucb-box-alignment-left ucb-box-style-fill ucb-box-theme-lightgray"><div class="ucb-box-inner"><div class="ucb-box-title">Meet the Shakespeare scholars</div><div class="ucb-box-content"><p><strong>Scene One: Finding a love</strong></p><p><em>Enter Dianne Mitchell, Katherine Eggert, Kevin Rich, Heidi Schmidt, &amp; Amanda Giguere</em></p><p>At CU Boulder, Shakespeare’s work is integral both in English classrooms and on stages. Scholars of literature and theater, as well as organizers of the Colorado Shakespeare Festival (CSF), found a love for Shakespeare’s work which now guides their professional careers.</p><p><a href="/english/katherine-eggert" data-entity-type="external" rel="nofollow">Katherine Eggert</a>, a professor of English and vice chancellor and senior vice provost for academic planning and assessment, remembers, “I was going to study Victorian literature in graduate school, but then I took a class from Stephen Greenblatt, who is one of the world’s most famous Shakespeare scholars, and I knew that I could not leave the Renaissance behind.”</p><p>Eggert, drawing on her work on Renaissance epistemology – understanding how it is possible we know things and not others – and Renaissance history, explains, “We know a great deal about Shakespeare’s dealings in property, his legal involvements, we know whether he paid his taxes. We know the kinds of records that get kept in life. We do not have his diaries; we do not have his private remarks about what he thought about any given subject. What we do have is his literary work.”</p><p>F<span>or </span><a href="/english/dianne-mitchell" data-entity-type="external" rel="nofollow"><span>Dianne Mitchell</span></a>, literary work and poetry of the Renaissance in particular spoke to her. “I had some great teachers when I was an undergraduate who really brought the 16th and 17th century literary world to life, especially poetry. I hadn’t realized how sensual and how deep the poetry felt.” Mitchell, among the other classes she teaches, developed an upper-level English course that is cross-listed with women and gender studies called <a href="https://experts.colorado.edu/display/coursename_ENGL-3227" data-entity-type="external" rel="nofollow"><em>Sex in Shakespeare’s Time</em></a>. She reflects that students are “often surprised how up front both real women and imaginary women can be about what it is that they can and don’t desire.”</p><p>The stage is another way people find new ways to look at texts and themselves. For <a href="/theatredance/kevin-rich" data-entity-type="external" rel="nofollow">Kevin Rich</a>, associate professor of theater and director of the <a href="https://online.colorado.edu/applied-shakespeare-certificate" data-entity-type="external" rel="nofollow">Applied Shakespeare</a> graduate certificate, theater offered him a place to conquer his fear of speaking. He remembers, “I was at a summer camp junior year of high school and they said do something that scares you, and I said acting scares me. I always wanted to be a teacher and once I found acting, I knew what I wanted to teach.”</p><p>Later, he saw a six-person production of Shakespeare’s <a href="https://www.folger.edu/explore/shakespeares-works/as-you-like-it/read/" data-entity-type="external" rel="nofollow"><em>As You Like It</em></a> on a basketball court in New York City’s lower east side and “it was magical. It was awesome. Kids who were coming to play basketball saw that a play was happening and sat on their basketballs and watched it,” he recalls.</p><p>For <a href="https://cupresents.org/artist/227/heidi-schmidt/" data-entity-type="external" rel="nofollow">Heidi Schmidt</a>, a director and teacher with the Colorado Shakespeare Festival, it was the connections she made rather than the setting of a theater that drew her in. “I really liked theater people. When I started hanging around theater people there was this relief that I could just be more of myself than I was in the rest of my life.” Now involved in every aspect of the theater, she works alongside Rich and Amanda Giguere, CSF director of outreach, to develop the CSF school program.</p><p><a href="https://cupresents.org/artist/225/amanda-giguere/" data-entity-type="external" rel="nofollow">Amanda Giguere</a> found theater at a young age at a Shakespeare camp: “It planted the seed and now this is my life’s work.” When she was choosing a graduate school, “I applied to one school, CU Boulder, sight unseen … because of its connection to the Colorado Shakespeare Festival. Twenty-one years later, I’m still here.” Her book, <a href="https://www.amandagiguere.com/books" data-entity-type="external" rel="nofollow"><em>Shakespeare &amp; Violence Prevention: A Practical Handbook for Educators</em></a>, allows teachers all over the country to use CSF’s teaching and practices in their classrooms.</p></div></div></div><p>In the five years since its publication and adaptation to film, the novel has grown a wider audience interested in imagining who Shakespeare could have been. Although scholars often try – to varying degrees of success – to explain Shakespeare the person, it is often novelists and playwrights like Shakespeare who bring him most to life. Through his plays, Shakespeare has touched audiences by interpreting the world he experienced through his writing.</p><p>Many Shakespeare scholars and <a href="https://cupresents.org/series/shakespeare-festival/" data-entity-type="external" rel="nofollow">Colorado Shakespeare Festival</a> (CSF) drama researchers are excited for the film adaptation of <em>Hamnet</em>. This film offers another insight into what Shakespeare could have been, beyond the dramas he created.</p><h4><strong>Act Two: Teaching Shakespeare</strong></h4><p><em>Enter CU Boulder’s Dianne Mitchell, Katherine Eggert, Kevin Rich, Heidi Schmidt and Amanda Giguere</em></p><p>“Shakespeare’s plays can be a way to think through questions that students themselves are asking, and we don’t only need Shakespeare to help us answer these questions. But it’s funny how much he is wondering about some of the same issues many of my students are wondering about or exploring some of the same problems that beset them,” says Mitchell.</p><p>Part of Shakespeare’s brilliance is his ability to reach people at any age. Kevin Rich, an associate professor of Theatre at CU Boulder, remembers seeing “a 4-year-old perform a Cleopatra monologue (from <a href="https://www.folger.edu/explore/shakespeares-works/antony-and-cleopatra/read/" data-entity-type="external" rel="nofollow"><em>Antony and Cleopatra</em></a>). You would think that’s too hard, but at that age, they’re not afraid of words yet – all words are new. This language was not intimidating and she killed it. She was so brave and let the words be as big as they were. That’s when I realized no age is too young to be introduced to these plays, and you’ll always learn more as you get older.”</p><p>Eggert emphasizes the importance of reading the text aloud in English courses: “I do ask students to read in class. I think it’s really important to hear Shakespeare and to hear the language coming out of your mouth and not just as a professional. When you read Renaissance literature – not just Shakespeare – and literature of any kind aloud, you understand it in your ear, even if you don’t understand every word on the page.”</p><h4>Act Three: Favorite plays</h4><p>Everybody reads Shakespeare differently, allowing for individuals to connect with his works in different ways.</p><p>Schmidt, for example, recalls a time at a camp where she was directing <em>Measure for Measure</em>. The play is about a duke who lets the affairs of state slide and instead of handling them, claims he’s going on sabbatical. However, he doesn’t and sticks around in disguise, observing as people get manipulated by his deputy.</p><p>“I said, ‘OK, let’s just agree as a group that tricking someone into having sex with someone they don’t want to is bad. Period, the end,’” Schmidt says. “The youngest kid in the class, 13, puts her hand in the air and shouts, ‘Consent is sexy!’ It was one of my proudest teaching moments.”</p><p>Giguere recognizes the power in drawing connections between historical events and the situations Shakespeare portrays in his stories.” <a href="https://wwnorton.com/books/tyrant/" data-entity-type="external" rel="nofollow"><em>Tyrant by Stephen Greenblatt</em></a> is about the tyrants in Shakespeare’s plays. I’m on the section on <a href="https://www.folger.edu/explore/shakespeares-works/richard-iii/read/" data-entity-type="external" rel="nofollow"><em>Richard III</em></a>, and I’m thinking about how it shows what happens when hate is allowed to grow and fester. It’s crazy that Richard III became king, that’s sort of baffling.”</p><p>Rich sees great power in how Shakespeare can capture human conditions in social and emotional situations, recalling, “I’ve had an inmate say to me, ‘Shakespeare had to have done time,’ because he cannot have written the prison scene in <em>Richard II </em>without having spent time in a cell himself. I’ve had veterans say he had to have been in war, because he cannot have possibly written about war like he does without having experienced it. So, maybe that’s true or maybe he was just that empathetic, that able to imagine perspectives other than his own.”</p><p>Mitchell reflects, “I’ve started teaching one of Shakespeare’s late plays — by which I mean a play that he wrote at the end of his dramatic career — both at the undergraduate and graduate level. It’s a play called <a href="https://www.folger.edu/explore/shakespeares-works/cymbeline/read/" data-entity-type="external" rel="nofollow"><em>Cymbeline</em></a>. One of the reasons [I like teaching it] is that students have no expectations about the play and its characters when they come into my class. I like teaching it because you really see a Shakespeare at the end of his career who is so confident in his dramatic abilities that he starts breaking all the rules. It’s really fun to watch him discard habits that he practices in some of his more canonical plays.”</p><p>Eggert finds that familiarity can generate new insights. She says, “The play I most like to teach, that’s <a href="https://www.folger.edu/explore/shakespeares-works/hamlet/read/" data-entity-type="external" rel="nofollow"><em>Hamlet</em></a>. It’s infinitely rich and even if students have already read it before, there is so much to discover on the second, third and 20th reading.” Whether a student is completely new to a play or reading it again, there are so many meaningful ways for them to interact with the text.</p><h4><strong>Act Four: </strong><em><strong>Hamnet</strong></em><strong> as a novel and a stage play</strong></h4><p>Giguere and Schmidt both saw the first stage adaptation of <em>Hamnet</em> at the Swan Theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon. Prior to seeing it, Giguere read the novel and was pleased that even though the novel takes a lot of liberties with who Shakespeare’s wife was, they are “beautiful liberties.”</p><p>O’Farrell’s novel, despite being about Shakespeare, leans more deeply into the lives of Agnes and his children than other novelists and scholars have. Often villainized in history, Agnes in the novel is shown in a new light. There is much speculation about the circumstances around her and William Shakespeare’s marriage, Eggert disputes some scholars’ insinuations that since she was older than he and was pregnant, she trapped him in a marriage that he didn’t want. This has led to a fictional narrative in which the two lived separate lives, and Shakespeare moved to London to escape her.</p><p>Eggert emphasizes that there is no evidence that supports this theory. In fact, she says, “just a few months ago, a scholar made a good case that <a href="https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c5ygregz439o" data-entity-type="external" rel="nofollow">a letter found in an old book that had been owned by an acquaintance of Shakespeare’s</a>, used as part of the binding of this book, was written to Shakespeare’s wife, and the letter was to her in London. While this letter doesn’t indicate the entirety of their relationship dynamic, it displays that their lives weren’t as separate as some scholars would want them to be.”</p><p>Mitchell describes the importance of centering a story around women, especially beside a character as large as Shakespeare. Instead of imagining Agnes’ life as small in comparison to Shakespeare’s, “One of the things that I liked about the novel was that it’s not about Shakespeare and his rise to fame and success, but rather about the domestic life of the intelligent and deep-feeling woman he married. We don’t have diaries or letters, so fiction is doing the work (of defining) that (Agnes) wasn’t some small person who wasn’t cared for and who was just kind of caught up in the Shakespeare industry. She has her own important life.”</p><p>Mitchell explains that the villainization of Agnes’ character could possibly stem from a thoughtful act William Shakespeare and his wife did. Many scholars use the fact that the couple didn’t get married in the local parish church to diminish her character since this act was violating the religious conventions at the time. However, at the time they got married, Shakespeare’s father, John – a cruel character in the novel – was being pursued for his debts. Instead of getting married in the church, where people would have seen him and tried to collect, William and Agnes married elsewhere as a kindness to William’s father.</p><h4><strong>Act Five: </strong><em><strong>Hamnet</strong></em><strong> as a film</strong></h4><p>There are many films that have captured, or attempted to capture, the plays and fictionalized life of Shakespeare. Movies such as <a href="https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0138097/" data-entity-type="external" rel="nofollow"><em>Shakespeare in Love</em></a> offer viewers a way to enter his life, even if it’s heavily fictionalized. Films are often one of the most important tools used by professors, including Eggert. Films about Shakespeare or his plays allow viewers to better understand the content, through observing the choices actors and directors make.</p><p>“I show clips from films and theater adaptations; there are resources through the [’s] libraries where you can see how if something is performed slightly differently, it emphasizes an entirely different meaning to the text,” Eggert says.</p><div class="ucb-box ucb-box-title-left ucb-box-alignment-left ucb-box-style-fill ucb-box-theme-lightgray"><div class="ucb-box-inner"><div class="ucb-box-title">Colorado Shakespeare Festival remains popular</div><div class="ucb-box-content"><p>The Colorado Shakespeare Festival program has reached more than 140,000 Colorado students and continues to be an integral part of English courses in college. For this school cycle, Rich has adapted <em>Hamlet</em> into a digestible 30-minute and 45-minute play, depending on the student audience. Giguere and Schmidt’s work allows for teachers to prep their students on the plots, background and characters in the plays. Similarly to Rich’s opinion that anyone can interact with the material, Giguere states, “I don’t think you need to be a professional actor or violence prevention expert to use Shakespeare’s plays to think about patterns of violence. I think the plays unlock a lot about our own world and help us understand what it means to be human and what it means to live in a society.”</p></div></div></div><p>Although there are fictionalized elements, the stage adaptation of <em>Hamnet</em> was another way for viewers to understand Shakespeare and England at the time. The stage adaptation included people of various ethnic and racial backgrounds, something Schmidt notes was a larger part of Shakespeare’s London than people often consider.</p><p>“There is a lot of research that exists about how London, in particular, is a lot more diverse than we like to think it was – it was not all white. There were a lot of different people coming back and living in London and making their lives in London. I think [an all-white version of London] an outdated and disproven illusion of what life looked like,” Schmidt says.</p><p>Rich adds that the landscape in theatre for interpreting Shakespeare has moved beyond a binary system of comedy and tragedy. “When I was first starting out as an actor, auditioning for companies, they would ask for two contrasting monologues – one comedic, one tragic. It seems that many have moved away from that because that creates a two dimensional view of his plays, which in reality are more than just two genres of comedies and tragedies. He finds levity in serious moments and he finds gravity in the funny moments.”</p><p>The film version of <em>Hamnet</em> continues to break down these binaries and established structures through its storytelling. The mysticism that Rich sees in Shakespeare’s work is what Giguere recognizes in O’Farrell’s novel. Some film viewers may recognize the mysticism of the novel while also seeing the humanity of Shakespeare and his family.</p><p>Some 400 years later, Shakespeare can connect with individuals on a number of levels. <em>Hamnet’s</em> release in theaters offers viewers a fictionalized way to see him as a person and one version of the life he could have led. However, the concrete things people know about Shakespeare’s storytelling and genius are found in his works. Giguere emphasizes that people should read “all of them. Truly, every Shakespeare play collides with you in different ways depending on where you are in life or what the world is doing. I say this in a tongue-and-cheek way, read all of them, watch all of them. Because that’s what baffles me about these works, is that sometimes you’ll collide with a play and it just hits you in the right way where, ‘Oh my goodness, this sheds light on this other aspect of my life.’”</p><p><em>They Exit (the movie theater)</em></p></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div>With the Nov. 26 cinematic release of Hamnet, CU Boulder scholars consider what we actually know about the famed playwright and why we’re still reading him four centuries later.</div> <h2> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type--ucb-related-articles-block paragraph--view-mode--default"> <div>Related Articles</div> </div> </h2> <div>Traditional</div> <div>0</div> <div> <div class="imageMediaStyle large_image_style"> <img loading="lazy" src="/asmagazine/sites/default/files/styles/large_image_style/public/2025-11/Hamnet%20scene.jpg?itok=kebg5dLj" width="1500" height="844" alt="Hamnet scene"> </div> </div> <div>On</div> <div>White</div> <div>Image provided by Focus Features</div> Wed, 26 Nov 2025 21:32:57 +0000 Kylie Clarke 6271 at /asmagazine