FANFARE July 2016 | Page 19

They had three children and the marriage survived for 34 years until Shakespeare’s death. 3. Copyright didn’t exist in Shakespeare’s time, so there was a thriving trade in copied plays. To help counter this, actors got their lines only when the play was in progress, often in the form of cue-acting. Someone backstage whispered prompts shortly before they delivered their lines. And Shakespeare never published his plays himself – that was actually two of his fellow actors,John Heminges and Henry Condell, who published 36 posthumously. 4. Shakespeare’s works have been translated into more than 80 languages, including the Star Trek argot of Klingon. That’s right! A bunch of nerds over at the Klingon Language Institute (no kidding!) translated a number of sonnets and a few plays into the inter-galactic language of Klingon, including Hamlet and Macbeth. Other famous translations include Catherine the Great’s adaptations into Russian, and those of Julius Nyerere, first president of Tanzania, who made translations into Swahili. 5. There are more than 80 variations recorded for the spelling of Shakespeare’s name. In the few original signatures that have survived, Shakespeare spelt his name Willm Shaksp, William Shakespe, Wm Shakspe, William Shakspere, Willm Shakspere, and William Shakspeare. There is no record of him ever having spelt it the way we know him today, “William Shakespeare.” 6. Unlike most artists of his time, Shakespeare died a very wealthy man with a large property portfolio. Many great historical figures of the arts including Edgar Allen Poe, Oscar Wilde and Leonardo da Vinci are believed to have died penniless. And you could be forgiven for thinking Shakespeare did too. Not so. In fact, the Bard was a wealthy man when he exited stage left on the 23rd April, 1616. He was quite a sharp businessman. He set up a jointstock company with his actors, and he took a share in the theatre company’s profits, as well as earning a fee for each play he wrote. 7. There are many conspiracy theories that Shakespeare never wrote any of his plays or sonnets. The essential plank of such speculation is that Shakespeare did not have the education or life experience necessary to construct the convincing dramatic narratives of his plays. He ’d never travelled to foreign lands, taken part in aristocratic sports – like hunting, falconry, tennis and bowling – and had no personal knowledge of military matters or courtly life. Ergo, only an aristocrat, nobleman, or lord could have authored such vivid dramas. Candidates with such experience, it is suggested, included Sir Francis Bacon and the Earl of Oxford Edward de Vere. So, to celebrate this momentous anniversary, you could do worse than catch up on love’s labour lost at your boyhood school desk, and make up for lost salad days by booking a special weekend at his home town of Stratford-upon-Avon, or even arranging to see one of his plays at the town’s Royal Shakespeare Theatre. n Where for art though my love... Romeo and Juliet Celebrating with some fine words... Twelfth Night Something strange this way comes... Macbeth 17