Skip to main content
All 6 posts by

Richard Schoch

is Professor of Drama at Queen’s University Belfast. He is currently in Stratford-upon-Avon, writing a history of Shakespeare’s birthplace.
Shakespeare's birthplace: Embellishing an ordinary home
Shakespeare's Birthplace
Shakespeare and Beyond

Shakespeare's birthplace: Embellishing an ordinary home

Posted
Author
Richard Schoch

Richard Schoch examines the first published image of William Shakespeare’s birthplace from 1769, reflecting on the transformation of a humble home into a significant tourist site in Stratford-upon-Avon.

What happens when actors, musicians, and scholars collaborate on a Restoration Shakespeare play
Shakespeare and Beyond

What happens when actors, musicians, and scholars collaborate on a Restoration Shakespeare play

Posted
Author
Richard Schoch

Participants watch as directors Amanda Eubanks Winkler and Richard Schoch give preliminary stagings to the actors and dancers, for Gildon’s 1700 adaptation of “Measure for Measure.” Part of the November 2014 Folger Institute weekend workshop, “Performing Restoration Shakespeare.” Part of…

Reduced Shakespeare Company and the golden age of Shakespeare parodies
Shakespeare and Beyond

Reduced Shakespeare Company and the golden age of Shakespeare parodies

Posted
Author
Richard Schoch

Reduced Shakespeare Company. (l-r) Reed Martin, Teddy Spencer, Austin Tichenor. Photo by Jeff Thomas. A high point in the Folger Shakespeare Library’s 2016 celebration of Shakespeare, The Wonder of Will, is the return appearance of the Reduced Shakespeare Company—the other…

Portraits in Hamlet: ‘Look here upon this picture, and on this’
Folger Theatre's 2010 Hamlet
Shakespeare and Beyond

Portraits in Hamlet: ‘Look here upon this picture, and on this’

Posted
Author
Richard Schoch

One of the oldest theatrical legends about Shakespeare is that he played the ghost in Hamlet. We know that Shakespeare was both an actor and a playwright, but we have no idea whether he acted this small, but memorable role.…

Hamlet wasn't always the prince with the common touch
David Tennant as Hamlet
Shakespeare and Beyond

Hamlet wasn't always the prince with the common touch

Posted
Author
Richard Schoch

When we think about Shakespeare on the stage we usually imagine two different historical moments: ‘then’ and ‘now’. ‘Then’ is Shakespeare’s lifetime, when Richard Burbage, the original Hamlet, first spoke ‘To be or not to be’ from the stage of…

Shock of the New, or a Ploy from the Past? Thoughts on OSF's Play "Translations"
The Oregon Shakespeare Festival's Allen Elizabethan Theatre. Featured is the set of OSF's 2013 production of A Midsummer Night's Dream. Photo by T. Charles Erickson.
Shakespeare and Beyond

Shock of the New, or a Ploy from the Past? Thoughts on OSF's Play "Translations"

Posted
Author
Richard Schoch

The Oregon Shakespeare Festival’s Allen Elizabethan Theatre. Featured is the set of OSF’s 2013 production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Photo by T. Charles Erickson. Much ado about the Oregon Shakespeare Festival, which has announced plans to ‘translate’ all of…