The Folger Shakespeare
The full text of all of Shakespeare's plays. Also includes commentary, textual notes, and further reading.
No Fear Shakespeare
Having trouble understanding Shakespeare's meaning? No Fear Shakespeare provides the original text alongside a modern translation.
Entire First Folio
From the Folger Library. The First Folio, published in 1623, was the first published collection of Shakespeare's plays. Here, you can flip through an entire First Folio, closely examine pages, print, copy text or images, search text, and more!
Acting:
Audio Articles on Shakespeare
Authorship Controversy:
Backstage:
Biographical:
Language and Play Analysis:
Shakespeare Resources:
Theatres of the Time
Theatres from the Current Time that Specialize in Shakespeare
Playing Shakespeare with John Barton consists of a 4-DVD informal master class with the venerable stage director. Find them at the LCC Library under call numbers: DVD 1155, DVD 1156, DVD 1157, and DVD 1158
We don't have any depictions of the theatre where Shakespeare worked, the Globe. But we have a glimpse of what it must have been like from the sketch below, drawn in 1596 by Dutch student Johannes de Witt. It shows us the interior of the Globe's rival, the Swan Theatre.
Shakespeare's Globe finished construction in 1997. It is located in London, on the original site of The Globe Theatre where Shakespeare worked. Builders tried to be as faithful as possible to Elizabethan construction methods and theatre designs.
The oldest Elizabethan theatre in America, the Oregon Shakespeare Festival's Elizabethan Stage has been rebuilt twice and improved several times.
The Droeshout Engraving
from the First Folio, 1623
about 228 copies remain
Shakespeare's funerary monument
c. 1617-1622
Holy Trinity Church,
Stratford-on-Avon
The Chandos Portrait
attributed to John Taylor, c. 1610
National Portrait Gallery, London
The Cobbe Portrait
Unknown artist
c. 1610
National Portrait Gallery, London
The Marshall Portrait
William Marshall
from Shakespeare's Poems
1640