The Man Who Pays The Rent

Shakespeare: The Man Who Pays the Rent, by Judi Dench

I love audiobooks. I don’t know if it’s because they allow me to listen while I do other things, or because I’m old and my eyes don’t focus like I used to. People say that listening to a book doesn’t count as reading it, but why would you want to talk to those people? They sound really fun at parties.

A few months ago, Sir Patrick Stewart’s book came out, read by the author, and it’s one of the best audiobooks I’ve ever experienced. Sometimes the author’s voice is just as important as what they have to say.

So when Dame Judi Dench’s book was announced shortly after this I quickly pre-ordered, frustrated to realize that it was released months ago in the UK but would wait for April 23 for a US release. Well, today is that day!

I was immediately disappointed to see that Dame Judi doesn’t narrate the book. That’s it, I want my money back. When she recited Sonnet 29 on the Graham Norton show, time damn near stopped. I must have played that clip two dozen times.

But wait, let’s not be hasty. I listen to the author’s introduction and quickly learn how this is going to go. This isn’t really an autobiography, like Sir Patrick’s book. It is more of a collection of interviews. Okay, that’s fine. He goes on to say that the voice will occasionally switch to Dame Judi herself (minus the too many F-bombs he had to edit :), so maybe it’ll be okay.

The first chapter, Macbeth, is literally nothing but Dench walking through the play, scene by scene, discussing in minute detail how to portray Lady Macbeth. I think I’m going to love this.

Introducing “My Own Personal Shakespeare: Macbeth”

My Own Personal Shakespeare: Macbeth Edition
Available Now on Amazon!

Not long after I started Shakespeare Geek, I wrote my daughter a sonnet for her first birthday. Almost twenty years later, now in college, she asked me, “Can I get a copy of Macbeth?”

“Of course,” I told her. “Which edition did you have in mind?”

“It doesn’t matter,” she said. “I just want my own personal copy. Something I can take notes in. I have a lot of thoughts.”

Ask and ye shall receive, my lovely. For years, I’ve wanted to contribute to the Great Shakespeare Bookshelf in some way, and this was a golden opportunity to do so. The idea flashed to me fully formed at that moment, and I knew I had my answer.

Introducing The My Own Personal Shakespeare Series

I don’t think my daughter’s alone in the universe. She wants a copy of her favorite Shakespeare play. She didn’t say she needed one for a certain class. She didn’t ask for Riverside or Folger or Arden, where she could read hundreds of pages of experts telling her what’s what. My daughter is very opinionated, she’ll be the first to tell you. They made her opinion editor of the school newspaper as a freshman, she’ll tell you that, too. Why should Shakespeare be any different? She’s going to have opinions, and what better place to keep them than right next to source material?

My Own Personal Shakespeare: Macbeth Edition is a stripped-down, unannotated version of the play intended to be a blank slate where you can revisit your relationship with Shakespeare’s work. It’s deliberately laid out with copious whitespace, leaving ample room for underlining, commenting, and even doodling in the margins, At the end of each act are a few blank pages for brain dumping on a larger scale.

Envisioning this project, I was reminded of our visit to the Folger Vault where we saw Folio #72, decorated with children’s drawings throughout the pages. I don’t want Shakespeare to be a read-only reference tome, sitting high on a shelf collecting dust. My children were exposed to Shakespeare in various forms before they were five years old. I wanted a Shakespeare edition that’s welcoming, almost interactive. Open it up and look at the pictures. Maybe you can read it, maybe you understand it. Or maybe you come back in a few years.

My Own Personal Shakespeare : Macbeth Edition

There are no footnotes here. No glossary. It is a deliberate opportunity to say, “I’m not going to tell you how to approach this play, or what you’re supposed to get out of it.” There are enough reference books out there; we didn’t need to make another one. There aren’t too many editions designed to be a personal reflection, though.

The beginning reader is not left adrift, however. We’ve added some informational content – descriptions of characters and places, as well as plot summaries for all the scenes. We like to think of these as save points in a video game. If the reader is lost in Act 2 Scene 2, it’s only going to get worse in Scene 3. So each scene starts with, “Here’s what happens in this scene.” I’ve said many times over the years that one of the keys to understanding Shakespeare is to have some grasp of character and plot before you see or read the play. That’s precisely what we’ve made here.

I hope our little project finds its audience. I imagine every copy becoming a unique treasure, representing the owner’s personal insight into what Shakespeare means to them. Share it with your friends, hand it down to your children. Turn into something rich and strange.

I’m happy to answer any questions in the comments!

I Said, ARE YOU READY?

No Shakespeare Day would be complete without the guest of honor. Sure, the legacy of William Shakespeare and his works lingers everywhere we look. It’s the reason we’re all here on any other day of the year, not just today.

But we started a tradition some years ago, with the help of Shakespeare’s good friend Ben Jonson. We like to invite the guest of honor to the party. He conjured ghosts, so can we. Today of all days we like to imagine he’s listening to what we’re offering, and that he appreciates it.

Thank you, Shakespeare.

Now, as the kids, say, #LFG!

Soul of the age!

The applause, delight,

the wonder of our stage!


My Shakespeare, rise!

A quill-grasping hand bursting forth from under the earth

Are You Ready?

Cartoon Shakespeare peeking around a corner

It’s that time of year again, my friends and followers. April 23. The day Shakespeare was born, or the day he died? Here we call it Shakespeare Day, and here we celebrate the man, the myth, the literal legend.

I’ve run this site for almost twenty years now, and every year is a little different. Sometimes I’ve got the time to live tweet all day. Sometimes it falls on a weekend and I’ve got nothing. There’ve been times I’ve gone on marathons, posting over a dozen times in a single day. I’ve had giveaways.

What will this year bring? We’ll just have to see, won’t we? I may have a surprise or two still up my sleeve, even after all that time.

Happy Shakespeare Day, everyone. Let’s do this.

Look At All The Shakespeare Videogames

AI-generated Shakespeare trying to play a standup arcade video game

For as long as I’ve been into Shakespeare, I’ve wondered about games based on Shakespeare. I own a lot of Shakespeare games, from Bards Against Humanity to Shakespeare Trivial Pursuit. But video games? That’s a different story. It takes a lot of effort to make a video game. You’ve got to decide the style – arcade, RPG, adventure? The platform – PC, console, mobile? And, of course, the game and the plot. How do you translate a Shakespeare play to an enjoyable video game?

Over the years, I’ve written about and played a few. There was supposed to be one of those massive multiplayer worlds called Arden, which would have been amazing, but it was doomed from the start. That was a shame. I just kind of lost the thread over time.

https://gamerant.com/best-games-based-shakespeare-plays/

So Many Games

Like a list of movie adaptations, I clicked on this article, assuming that I knew everything it was going to tell me. Nope! I’ve played some of these, but most were new. I also know of a few that didn’t make the list, that I’ll talk about at the end. Let’s go through this, shall we?

  • Something Wicked: A side-scroller based on the battle scenes in Macbeth? Never heard of it, never played it, but sounds like fun.
  • Life Is Strange: Before The Storm: A sequel to Life Is Strange, whatever that is. But it’s based on The Tempest, which has always been a favorite of mine for story fodder, so I’d happily play it if it fell in my lap.
  • Lion King obviously shouldn’t have made the list.
  • Romeo Wherefore Art Thou looked cute — a platformer where you play Romeo trying to find Juliet, I guess? The link included in the article doesn’t work, but fear not, I found one that does! It’s actually difficult, I haven’t made it past level 2 yet.
  • Hamlet Or The Last Game Without MMORPG Features, Shaders, And Product Placement I did get to play this one a little but, but it’s the kind of thing I wouldn’t have remembered if I didn’t see the screenshots.
  • Final Fantasy 15 somebody will have to tell me, is there enough Hamlet in this to deserve placement on the list? I’m looking for games that are clearly Shakespeare games, not games Lion King. Then again I gave the benefit of the doubt to Life is Strange so you never know.
  • Haven looks awesome, has anybody played it? A space story with Romeo and Juliet on the run? That sounds like it has potential.
  • To Be Or Not To Be the interactive novel is exactly that. If you’ve read the choose-your-own-adventure book you know how this one is going to go. I’ve read the book, haven’t played the game.
  • A Midsummer Night’s Choice is another interactive text adventure, playable for free here: https://www.choiceofgames.com/midsummer-nights-choice/ It’s also available as a mobile app.
  • Elsinore I feel like I played this one, and I feel like I would have enjoyed it. I love the idea of a time-loop story where Ophelia is trying to save herself and everyone she loves, but keeps failing over and over again.

Don’t Forget These

Recently I worked a little bit with a Redditor who put a game out for Oculus Quest called Bard Sabre. In this one the words of Shakespeare’s famous monologues come hurling at you like objects and you have to knock them down in order, while avoiding the bad guys. The idea is that you’re memorizing the speech while you do it. I thought it had potential, and hope he continues.

‘Speare unfortunately doesn’t exist anymore. Hey, it was 2006, and I have been doing this a long long time. This one was a good old fashioned space shooter in the traditional arcade style. Didn’t really have much by way of direct connection to Shakespeare, but in a world where Shakespeare video games were few and far between I’d take what I could get.

Write ‘n Fight is a Mortal Kombat 2d fighter, where the players are all classic authors — including Shakespeare. Want to see whether Shakespeare could take Hemingway in a bare-knuckle brawl? Now you can!

Does anybody know any that we missed? There are a number of lists like this one that focus on the many, many RPG-style console games that retell elements of Shakespeare stories (avenge your father, be with your star-crossed love, etc …), but I can’t speak at all to how much actual Shakespeare is in any of them.