Check this out. Shakespeare’s Den is holding a photo contest to find people who are putting a little Shakespeare in their summer vacation. I’m on one of my summer vacations now (no Shakespeare to be found), but in August I’ll be heading down to Cape Cod to see The Tempest, maybe I can get some shots in there. I’ll dress my 2yr old up like Caliban or something :).
Here’s how this is going to work… We are looking for photographs that incorporate Shakespeare into your summer vacation. This could range from going to Ashland, dressing up as a duke at a Renaissance fair, choreographing a sword fight, or starring in your own performance of one of the Bard’s plays! Here’s how to play… 1. Read the rules below.
2. Take the picture.
3. Email the photograph to submissions@shakespearesden.com.
4. Along with the picture, please include:
– Your name
– Your email address
– Your street address, city, state, and zip code (for prizes)
– A short description of the photograph—i.e. location, what was the
event, etc. Bonus points if your explanation is in iambic pentameter!
(We promise that we do not share your names, address or email with anyone. This is for us only!) Prizes Everyone who submits a photo will get a free Shakespeare/Marlowe ’08 Bumper Sticker. 1st place—$100 Gift Certificate to Shakespeare’s Den & a bag of Shakespeare’s Den schwag.
2nd place—$50 Gift Certificate to Shakespeare’s Den & a Shakespeare’s Den T-shirt
3rd place—A Shakespeare’s Den T-shirt Judging How can we judge art? It’s a tough call. But here’s what we’ll remember when looking at a photograph:
– Was it artistic? Humorous? Clever? Inspiring? In the spirit of the contest? Rules 1. You must have taken the photograph or are the copyright holder. You can be in the photo, just don’t send in a picture taken by Herb Ritts of Judi Dench, okay. Just cause you bought the magazine, doesn’t mean it’s your photo.
2. Please submit photographs taken this summer.
3. Please submit an authentic photograph—i.e. no photo-shopping!
4. You may submit more than one photo but only one winner per household.
5. By submitting the photo you are giving us permission to post your photo on our site along with your first name and city you reside. We also can post this photo and info in any future contests or advertising.
6. Employees of Shakespeare’s Den are the sole decision makers on the winning photos. Contest ends August 31st, so get your pictures in by then. In the meantime, we’ll post our favorite pictures at Shakespeare’s Den as they come in, so stay tuned—er—stay online! If you have any questions, don’t hesitate to send us an email at sales@shakespearseden.com.
Month: July 2008
Sports in Shakespeare
In honor of the upcoming Olympics I thought it might be fun to look at references to sports in Shakespeare’s plays. They can be in passing, or actually portrayed on stage. I know about the wrestling in As You Like It, and I suppose we need to count the fencing in Hamlet (they are after all counting points, not trying to kill each other, in theory). What else? Sorry for the short post I’m on vacation 🙂
Hamlet's Blackberry
http://noahliebman.com/2008/07/04/on-hamlets-blackberry/ Thanks to Noah for this link to an NPR segment on the future of paper. Haven’t listened yet, but it’s in my queue. I love stuff like that.
HyperHamlet
http://www.hyperhamlet.unibas.ch/index.php Not quite sure about the usefulness of this tool, but it sure represents lots of work. Work your way through the script of Hamlet, pointing out other literary references to the text. For instance on one hand you’ve got James Joyce making use of the text “For this relief much thanks.” But later in the same scene, linked to the line “Not a mouse stirring”, we find a Charles Schultz reference to Sally reading “The Night Before Christmas” and coming to the “Not a creature was stirring, not even a mouse” line. The site appears wiki-driven, so the entries are all from users trying to help. I appreciate the attempt, but like I said, not really sure what you’d *do* with it.
Review : Shakespeare Wars, by Ron Rosenbaum
It’s taken me almost 2 years to finish Shakespeare Wars, and given how often I’ve blogged about individual pieces it’s somewhat anticlimactic to review it now. But, I’ll give it a shot.
Start with a common assumption about the quality of Shakespeare’s works. That it is possible to run into another person, discuss that special something that makes Shakespeare Shakespearean, and understand what each other is talking about, even if you can’t define it. (I find, when I really get animated, that I either stop talking all together because words can’t adequately express it, or I just start cussing like George Carlin because of the outlet it provides in getting one’s point across :))
In one way, this book is Rosenbaum’s effort to define what that something is. He gives plenty of examples that skirt around the issue. His retelling of Brooks’ famous “split the atom and release the infinite energies” line, for example, is what convinced me to buy the book. Lines like that abound throughout the book, making the Shakespeare lover in us all laugh and rock back and forth in our chairs and say, “Yes! yes yes yes! Exactly!” to no one in particular, because we know there’s someone on the other end of the page, the author, who has captured the feeling exactly as we felt it.
He speaks of Cordelia’s line, “No cause, no cause…” in such reverent tones that the memory of the moment brings tears to his eyes even as he types it, and we believe him. He describes Kevin Kline’s Falstaff almost entirely based on how the character gets up from a bench in the first scene, as if that were enough to capture the entire performance. And we know it is, because we’ve all had moments like that, split seconds in time, where you feel some brief glimpse into the bottomlessness of what Shakespeare’s words provide.
I chose that word bottomlessness on purpose, because it is a major theme in the book and it’s where I think things start to go over the edge for me. Rosenbaum’s position seems to be, “Ok, let’s assume that a true and perfect understanding of what it means to be Shakespearean is like a bottomless void, and we will never know the real answers for certain. Now, having agreed to that, let’s spend our lives pursuing the answer anyway.”
And that’s where, as a logic-driven engineering sort, I mentally start to check out. If you’ve agreed that there is no true answer, then pursuit of one can only lead to madness. I had an idea once for a book called What Shakespeare Means To Me, which would essentially be a collection of those moments in time, those glimpses of the infinite, that we’ve all had the joy of experiencing. I would read a book like that. Just story after story of shared bliss. Where Shakespeare Wars was that, I was all about it. Heck, where it was about that it was all I could do to not rush back to the computer and blog about it (as I often did anyway).
But the remainder of the book ends up being an exploration of every corner of Shakespeare’s works by the various personalities who champion each direction as being the one true source for the one true answer. There’s the Original Spelling group. The Two Hamlets and the Three Lears war. The “never blotted a line” argument. The “close readers”. Where each of these was a lesson in how one might study Shakespeare, I was all for it. Where it turned into a story about one individual who has spent 30 thankless years trying to prove his point, I don’t know what I was. I can’t really say I was sympathetic.
There is more in this book that bored me than thrilled me. Rosenbaum spends much of the book (he opens and closes with it) salivating over Brooks’ Dream, something that I never saw and apparently will never be able to see. When he tries to define the infinite, either through his own experience or the example of others, I was usually lost. But we he pointed to specific examples – Kline, Welles, even Clare Danes as Juliet – things that I could share in, I was hooked. It was those moments that kept me reading this book, because they are just that good.