#ShareyourShakespeare with the RSC and help celebrate creativity

The Royal Shakespeare Company has unveiled the results of its largest ever digital celebration by audiences.

The #ShareYourShakespeare campaign challenged audiences everywhere to share their love of Shakespeare in whatever way they chose, whether that be performing a speech, baking a cake, painting a picture, serenading a neighbour over the garden fence or teaching their dog to bark Macbeth.

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The campaign has so far attracted more than 1,000 submissions from audiences around the world including community theatre-makers, amateur companies, schools, families and working actors with entries received from as far as the USA, Russia, South Africa and Saudi Arabia.

Notable entries received as part of #ShareYourShakespeare include:

- Romeo and Juliet - An emoji love story

- Lockdown Macbeth - a micro-animated tragedy featuring baked bean-tin castle and cacti ‘Burnham Wood’

People from around the world have been playing their partPeople from around the world have been playing their part
People from around the world have been playing their part

- A Midsummer Night’s Dream performed by George the Cat

- Lego Shakespeare featuring ‘Romeo and Juliet’ by The Kings School, Devon and The Tempest by Finlay Aldridge (age 11)

- A family ‘zoom’ chat with King Lear, Goneril and Regan

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- Oeuf-philia and Hamlegg - Creative egg crafts from across the cannon

- Romeo and Juliet meets U2 - A musical rendition of the Prologue set to guitar

- A photograph of HRH The Prince of Wales, President of the Royal Shakespeare Company, performing the role of Macbeth, age 17

- A Shakespearean/Star Wars mash up from The Shakespeare’s Birthplace Trust

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- All The World’s A Stage ... for women too written by Harriet Walter and William Shakespeare

- The Tempest reimagined as a graphic novel

- An A to Z of Shakespeare ... in Scrabble

- The Great Shakespeare Bake Off - Featuring Lady Macbeth’s ‘out damn spot’ biscuits, cookie-cutter Romeo and Juliet and a drowned Ophelia, immortalized in icing.

A selection of the most creative, surprising and inspiring contributions have been collated digitally in a shared celebration of Shakespeare, which can be viewed at the RSC’s website and YouTube channel.

The #ShareYourShakespeare campaign launched online with a specially-recorded performance of ‘The Seven Ages of Man’ speech by Doctor Who and Broadchurch star David Tennant, who last appeared at the RSC in Gregory Doran’s 2013 production of Richard III.

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Joining David for the video broadcast were associate artists Charlotte Arrowsmith, David Bradley, Stephen Boxer and Paapa Essiedu, who played the title role of Hamlet in Simon Godwin’s 2016 production for the RSC, soon to be broadcast on the BBC. Other RSC alumni and associate artists who took part included Fleabag star Ray Fearon, award-winning British stage and film actresses Jane Lapotaire and Katy Stephens and David Threlfall, star of the RSC’s 2016 production of Don Quixote and the long-running Channel 4 TV series Shameless.

New contributors to the campaign include British stage, film and television actress Adjoah Andoh, writer, actor and political activist John Kani and RSC associate artist Harriet Walter, who can currently be found starring in the hit BBC TV series Killing Eve.

Gregory Doran, artistic director of the Royal Shakespeare Company, said: “We have been overwhelmed by the creativity and resourcefulness of those who have contributed to the Share Your Shakespeare campaign so far.

“Whether re-creating Romeo and Juliet in lego, reciting Hamlet to your cat or re-enacting the Battle of Agincourt in the back garden, we’re thrilled to see so many embracing their inner creativity in quarantine through their shared love of Shakespeare.

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“Shakespeare himself was no stranger to self-isolation. When he was just starting as a playwright in London, the theatres were commanded to close, at which point Shakespeare wrote two magnificent narrative poems, Venus and Adonis and The Rape of Lucrece. Then again, when the Globe was told to haul down its flag and bolt its doors again in 1609, he published his collection of 154 sonnets.

“For those of us trying to be as creative as possible in lockdown, Shakespeare’s example is a little intimidating. Nevertheless, we can all play our part, big or small, in coming together to celebrate and connect with each other on Shakespeare’s 456th birthday.

“And as we celebrate, please consider giving a birthday present of a donation to our home learning programme. Every gift will help young people continue to learn, and be inspired by Shakespeare, now as they work from home and, in the future when our theatres reopen. These home learning resources include live lessons, activities and videos and are part of a far-reaching education programme that sees over 500,000 young people every year experience first-hand the extraordinary power of Shakespeare’s language.”

The campaign will continue over the coming weeks. Those who would like to contribute are asked to film or photograph their Shakespeare in any way and upload it to Instagram, Twitter or Youtube, tagging @theRSC and using the hashtag #ShareYourShakespeare. The RSC will continue to share any entries via social media throughout the month of May 2020.

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Michael Witmore, director of the Folger Shakespeare Library, with which the RSC is running the project, said: “It doesn’t matter where you start or finish, how polished your results. We just want to show what ordinary creative people – which means, all people – can do when we put our minds and hearts together in a time of crisis.”

Visit rsc.org.uk for more information about the project and to watch a compilation of entries.See rsc.org.uk/support/make-a-donation to donate to the RSC.

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