Ottawa Citizen

THE WINTERS OF HIS DISCONTENT

What did Shakespear­e really look like? Writer shares his obsessive quest to see

- MALCOLM FORBES

Stalking Shakespear­e: A Memoir of Madness, Murder, and My Search for the Poet Beneath the Paint

Lee Durkee

Scribner

In the opening pages of Stalking Shakespear­e, Lee Durkee sets the scene by disclosing preliminar­y facts about his place, pastime and personalit­y. He describes how after divorcing his wife he moved to Malletts Bay, in Vermont. It reminded him of his native Mississipp­i — that is until the seasons changed, the temperatur­es plummeted and the wind howled through the cracks in his fishing shack. To get through, he became interested in, then addicted to, Elizabetha­n portraitur­e.

“That,” he writes, “was my nature, obsessive — what women call `passionate' at the beginning of a marriage and `psychotic' by the time they kick you out.”

Durkee, a novelist whose books include The Last Taxi Driver (2020), pored over Elizabetha­n portraits with one aim in particular: to find out what William Shakespear­e looked like. He was suspicious because to him, “Shakespear­e had been getting prettier by the century.”

Durkee was determined to succeed as an amateur enthusiast where many academic experts had failed by uncovering the true identity of the celebrated playwright. His book is a captivatin­g account of how a hobby became an obsession, how a noble quest turned into a fool's errand, and how his research changed the way he looked at himself.

The first source of Durkee's infatuatio­n is a portrait miniature of a lovelorn courtier by the Elizabetha­n painter Nicholas Hilliard. But he is then fascinated by another portrait by the same artist, one that a Harvard scholar claimed depicted Shakespear­e.

Durkee dismisses this idea but finds himself intrigued enough to carry on searching for the real portrait of Shakespear­e.

Over a series of long winters, he immerses himself in his project. Soon Durkee's office walls are like those of a police investigat­ion room, with Shakespear­e suspects (or “mug-shot bards”) staring out at him.

Durkee devotes a chapter to each of the images. One of the most significan­t is the Droeshout engraving, which appeared in the collection of plays known as the First Folio in 1623.

Shakespear­e's friend and rival Ben Jonson authentica­ted the likeness. But Durkee casts doubt, wondering why those closest to Shakespear­e would select this cartoonish picture — “the bugeyed bloke with the pecan head” — for such a worthy tribute. We encounter the Chandos portrait (painter unknown) and learn how one 19th-century collector believed Shakespear­e had posed as one of his creations — Shylock.

Durkee offers witty nicknames for the various renditions: the Flower portrait (deemed a 19th-century forgery in 2005) presents “a clown-faced bard,” the Cobbe portrait a “gigolo bard” and the Ashbourne portrait a nobleman — with a dark side.

Eventually Durkee gets out and about, moving to Japan on a fellowship, visiting the Folger Shakespear­e Library and hunting a portrait in Stratford-upon-avon. But the farther he travels and the longer he studies, the more he gets lost in a labyrinth full of twists and turns, detours and dead ends.

Fortunatel­y, Durkee's zeal proves infectious, and he keeps readers hooked with his dogged sleuth-work, his radical thoughts on authorship and his insightful potted histories of each portrait — some involving royal intrigue, unsolved murders and sinister coverups.

The book is particular­ly absorbing when Durkee allows the spotlight to swing from Shakespear­e to himself. That light picks out every blemish. We hear how he fuels long hours of research and endures many a winter of discontent with steady supplies of Adderall and tequila. He wears his broken heart on his sleeve and writes candidly about unrequited love and his “feral patheticne­ss.”

He freely admits there is a correlatio­n between his outof-control collection of digital portraits and his state of mind: “I could murder any curator I wanted to and then plead not guilty by reason of insanity, and exhibit A in my defence would be my computer files.”

Durkee is such a sympatheti­c narrator it's hard not to champion him when he crashes and burns and suffers the next morning, or when his fact-finding mission takes him down a rabbit hole or shows there is little method in his madness. His prose is vibrant, at times it is too slick for its own good, but when he gets the balance right, his words thrill and beguile.

Looking at the “Manson Family of Shakespear­es” on his wall, he realizes his office has become “a halfway home for punch-drunk poets: eyes corkscrewe­d, cheeks scarred, ears cauliflowe­red, noses bowered. So many mutts: the catfish and drift-eyed, the banana-nosed, poxed, acned, and apoplectic, a police lineup of jostled bards.”

Stalking Shakespear­e is part treasure hunt, part warts-and-all memoir.

“It's not a pretty story,” Durkee warns at the outset, “but it's an honest one.” It's also a gripping, poignant and enjoyable one.

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 ?? LEON NEAL/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Lee Durkee examined countless images of the bard, seen in a painting in London, for his book, Stalking Shakespear­e.
LEON NEAL/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Lee Durkee examined countless images of the bard, seen in a painting in London, for his book, Stalking Shakespear­e.

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