Happy Birthday, Will, on 23rd April!
To honour you, Cevantes and St George, 23rd April has also been declared World Book Night 2014.
My guest tonight is one of the world’s best selling playwrights and a man whose plays are performed in most countries and poems are read in schools wherever English is spoken..... much to the regret of most school kids!
To honour you, Cevantes and St George, 23rd April has also been declared World Book Night 2014.
My guest tonight is one of the world’s best selling playwrights and a man whose plays are performed in most countries and poems are read in schools wherever English is spoken..... much to the regret of most school kids!
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Mr Shakespeare, or if I may call you Will, it’s a real honour and a pleasure talking to you tonight. I know you haven't given many interviews and you cultivate the man of mystery persona, even to the extent I notice of shaving off your moustache and wearing dark glasses. What convinced you to break your silence after all these years?
That’s interesting. So without explaining how it is you and I are talking 450 years after you supposedly died, how are you going to do that?
I'm sure you will. Will, ou wrote 38 plays and numerous sonnets. How did you keep up that phenomenal output?
Anyway, what do you mean 38 plays? I only get royalties on 12! I’m gonna kill that agent and sue ‘is bum off!
What’s a sonnet anyway?
It's a poem of 14 lines, Will, with a very strict iambic pentameter rhyme scheme and specific structure. You're supposed to have written 154 of the things!
Not me, Man. Must 'ave been that guy Bacon. You'd 'ave fought inventin' the frozen chicken would 'ave been enough, but he keeps trying to swipe my credit sort of fing!
Ok, well you wrote a number of history plays about the Kings of England. Why no queens?
Not me, Man. Must 'ave been that guy Bacon. You'd 'ave fought inventin' the frozen chicken would 'ave been enough, but he keeps trying to swipe my credit sort of fing!
Ok, well you wrote a number of history plays about the Kings of England. Why no queens?
Look at that Spencer guy. He pens this thing called The Faerie Queen, all ‘bout Liz One and wot a grovelling piece of stuff. ‘e got nuffing. Not even a knighthood to keep his ears warm. I tell you, I’m finkin’ of doing a load more Henry IV parts and selling ‘em to TV to replace Corrie. It's gettin' a bit stale!
An interesting concept, Will. Your contemporaries were all popular playwrights. Why do you think you’ve lasted longer than any of them?
You is talking ‘bout Ben Jonson and that Philip Marlowe guy (or was that the detective?). Yeh, they was ok, but not wicked, man. I mean they could wield a quill, but could they scribe a joke? I fink not. I mean, look at dat Faustus play. All the “Doctor, doctor” jokes de man Marlowe could ‘ave put in... not one. Ok “The face that sank a Fousand Ships”, that wasn’t bad and the crowds was rollin’ in the aisles at most nights. But I got more funnies in Macbeth and King Lear than de rest of ‘em put together! Ok, so why is I still around. Easy, man, ‘cos I is the Bard, and what’s more I is a dead Bad Bard. Well, a dead Bard.
How’s your wife, Will?
The famous Annie? That was all PR! I met her in the lights and she did a bit of average actin’ at the Globe. She ‘ad to dress as a boy, ‘cos girls ain't allowed on the stage, which is a bit ironical ‘cos she ain't that bad looking. But no one took any notice until she cut her hair and sung a few weepies. Then she got that bit part in Les Mis and she ain't looked over ‘er shoulders since, or mine come to that. One smooth lady. The PR guys put the word round she lived in Stratford-on-Avon, but the fools forgot to change ‘er name to Anne Shakespeare. So they gave ‘er three kids to keep her amused. Bit of a bodge up there, Man! You hear what I’m sayin’? Yeh, she was a nice kid, good hair, but she wasn’t my old lady!
Tell me about your childhood in Stratford-Upon-Avon, Will.
But, you’re buried in Stratford-on-Avon, Will. How do you explain that?
Your accent, Will. How come you're speaking a sort of cross between Cockney, Estuary English and Gangsta?
Hmm.... I've heard that the purest English is now spoken by people in Boston. How do you feel about that?
I Don't, Man! Never heard of the place. Up by Romford way is it?
Well, what's your next project, Will?
Tricky one that, Man. Now that Larry Oliver is gone and kicked the bucket and Kenny Brannigan is too busy bein' a Swedish detective the historical stuff is dead, I'm turnin' to music big time and I've become a music blogger. I'm givin' prizes for the best comment and lookin' at the time now is the winner of my discotheque. Hey, that's not a bad line to start Dicky 3! Bit of work needed, but not bad!
Will, as one of the world's most successful writers what advice would you give to an aspiring author?
Keep the day job! Don't write on de Queens and get a good PR operation behind you, man!
Will, it's been a pleasure talking to you and a real eye-opener. Good luck with your next project.
Thanks, Man. My agent will send the bill.
Will Shakespeare doesn't have his own website yet, nor does he blog, but you can find out all about World Book Night on
http://www.worldbooknight.org/what-is-world-book-night
Blog on, Dudes!
I say, Will, this sounds really cool. Do you know that some of your plays have inspired spin-offs? A guy called Nahum Tate had a go at King Lear back in the 1680s, giving it a happy ending. And more recently there have been musicals: Kiss Me Kate (based on The Taming of the Shrew), Return to the Forbidden Planet (The Tempest), The Boys from Syracuse (The Comedy of Errors), and of course West Side Story (Romeo & Juliet). I even had a go at R&J myself, though my version isn't a musical - it's a novel. Give it a go - you might even like it...
ReplyDeleteYo, Sue,
DeleteSo what you is sayin' is dat I should make me agent to get his digit out and claim a load of royalties from all these copies, 'cos dis Bard don't remember given de contract ok.
Thanks for de heads up, Sue!
Hey, and I wrote King Lear as a comedy. Ain't dis guy's fault if de punters don't understand me sense of de humour!
Keep cool, Babe.
Will
This is excellent, Richard! I loved it! My daughter teaches English Literature at a school here in NL and I told her ages ago she should teach them that our Will was the first rapper (not Donne :)), so you've really tickled me with this street wise, Will Shakespeare. Glad to know he's up to some new tricks now!
ReplyDeleteHi Val,
DeleteMany thanks for that and please forward to your daughter!
On Friday next week Christopher Marlowe has asked me to post an open letter putting his side of the Elizabethan situation. He and Will were not great mates!