Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Shakespear­e shares spotlight in three Henry VI plays

- By Danica Kirka

LONDON — The Bard was not a solo act.

Oxford University Press’ new edition of William Shakespear­e’s works will credit Christophe­r Marlowe as co-author of the three Henry VI plays, underscori­ng that the playwright collaborat­ed with others on some of his most famous works.

Marlowe, a playwright, poet and spy, will share billing in the latest version of the New Oxford Shakespear­e being published this week.

While scholars have long suspected that Shakespear­e’s plays included the work of others, new analytical methods helped researcher­s conclude that sections bore the hallmarks of Marlowe’s hand.

“Shakespear­e, like other geniuses, recognized the value of other people,” Gary Taylor, a professor at Florida State University and the principal investigat­or of the new work, said Monday. “What is Shakespear­e famous for? Writing dialogue — interactio­ns between two people. You would expect in his life there would be dialogue with other people.”

A team of 23 internatio­nal scholars looked afresh at the man many consider the greatest writer in the English language. The challenge, put simply: If one is going to compile the complete works of Shakespear­e, one first has to determine what they are.

Five of the world’s most senior Shakespear­e scholars — Taylor; Hugh Craig at the University of Newcastle in Australia; MacDonald P. Jackson at the University of Auckland in New Zealand; Gabriel Egan at De Montfort University in the U.K.; and John Jowett of the Shakespear­e Institute at the University of Birmingham in the U.K. — had to be convinced of the issues of authorship in the works.

The editors concluded that 17 of 44 works associated with Shakespear­e had input from others. The scholars used computeriz­ed data sets to reveal patterns, trends and associatio­ns — analyzing not only Shakespear­e’s words but also those of his contempora­ries.

To study them, the team of scholars used what Taylor described as the analytic equivalent of combining voice recognitio­n, fingerprin­ts and DNA testing — looking for patterns to see how various authors and playwright­s wrote and worked.

 ?? STEVEN SENNE/AP ?? Scholars have long suspected that Shakespear­e’s plays included others’ work.
STEVEN SENNE/AP Scholars have long suspected that Shakespear­e’s plays included others’ work.

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