RN Documentary: Will the Real Will Shakespeare Please Stand Up?
Series: RN Focus on Poetry
From: Radio Netherlands Worldwide
Length: 00:29:30
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Piece Description
Part of the Series "RN Focus on Poetry" The question surrounding the authorship of the plays and sonnets attributed to William Shakespeare has been debated for centuries. Two recent books take very different points of view on the issue. Amsterdam-based author Rodney Bolt explores the possibility that Christopher Marlowe authored the plays. Harvard University professor Stephen Greenblatt is convinced it can be no one other than Shakespeare himself. The two writers face-off in a debate hosted by 19th century American humorist Mark Twain who once wrote, “So far as anyone knows or can prove, Shakespeare of Stratford-on-Avon never wrote a play in his life.”
2 Comments
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Review of RN Documentary: Will the Real Will Shakespeare Please Stand Up?The "Mark Twain" narrator is a little bit much, but it might be a gateway for the listener... the inclusion of Prof. Michael Greenblatt, author of "Will In The World" gives this documentary added weight. He is brilliant and illumines this piece. Who was Shakespeare? Hell, I know, but anything that gets us to contemplate him -- like this segment -- is more than worth the while. Thought provoking! |
Transcript
SCRIPT
VOICE: Radio Netherlands presents Vox Humana.
MUSIC: “La Coranto” – Musicians of the Globe
ANNOUNCER: It’s time once again for the world’s favorite literary historical reality debate show, “Will the Real Will Shakespeare Please Stand Up?” – moderated, as always, by humanity’s humblest humorist: Mr. Mark Twain.
APPLAUSE
TWAIN: Thank you for that warm welcome. But before I introduce our guests, I’ve got a little bone to pick. An apocryphal story’s been circumnavigating the past century or so, attributed to yours truly, that the plays of one William Shakespeare of Stratford-on-Avon were not written by him. The story goes, they were, in fact, written by another man from Stratford who, coincidentally, happened to be named William Shakespeare. (LAUGHTER) Now I’ve made some supercilious remarks in my time, but let me assure you, there has been only one Shakespeare. Th...
Read the full transcript
Musical Works
Doco:
O Mistress Mine, Shakespeare’s Musick, Philips 446 687-2, Musicians of the Globe O Coranto Traditional Total: 2’30”





Michael Faulkner
Posted on December 13, 2007 at 04:26 PM | Permalink
Review of RN Documentary: Will the Real Will Shakespeare Please Stand Up?
The canned laughter and applause really does a disservice to the information contained therein, as does the ham-handed portrayal of Mark Twain, who admittedly was fascinated by the Shakespearean authorship controversy. These rough edges are rounded out, however, thanks to the fascinating knowledge base of the two guests. A previous understanding of the basic controversy surrounding Shakespearean authorship will help in the early part of this program, as labels like "oxfordian" and "baconian" are tossed around with nary an explanation, but the program soon veers into interesting territory that glosses over this oversight. For those interested in further reading on the topic, I would recommend the book "Who Wrote Shakespeare." Incidentally, the fiction Steven Greenblatt dreams of writing I believe has already been written - the play "School of Night" by Peter Whelan deals with Marlowe's life and contains an implied sexual tryst between Marlowe, Shakespeare, and the Dark Lady of the sonnets. Another very good play on the authorship controversy is Amy Freed's "The Beard of Avon."
All in all, I found this program interesting and amusing, dealing, as it does, with a subject that is so much literary and historical detective work full of sound and fury, yet ultimately signifying nothing (barring an as yet undiscovered archeological proof). Whoever wrote Shakespeare was a genius (or many geniuses, if one believes in group authorship), and whoever he or she was, we know, revere, and love him as Shakespeare. Still, it's fun to conjecture.