Toronto Star

Shakespear­e: actor, playwright, social climber

- JENNIFER SCHUESSLER THE NEW YORK TIMES

Previously unknown records show that the Bard appeared to value gentleman status Shakespear­e biography has long circled a set of tantalizin­g mysteries: Was he Protestant or secretly Catholic? Gay or straight? Loving toward his wife or coldly dismissive?

That the man left no surviving letters or autobiogra­phical testimony has hardly helped, ensuring that accounts of his life have often relied on “one halfpenny worth of fact to an intolerabl­e deal of suppositio­n,” as scholar C.W. Scott-Giles once lamented.

Only a few scraps of new material relating to Shakespear­e in his lifetime have surfaced over the past century. But now, a researcher has uncovered nearly a dozen previously unknown records that shed clearer light on another much discussed side of the man: the social climber.

The documents, discovered by Heather Wolfe, the curator of manuscript­s at the Folger Shakespear­e Library in Washington, relate to a coat of arms that was granted to Shakespear­e’s father in 1596, attesting to his and his son’s status as gentlemen.

Considered with previously known records, Wolfe argues, the documents suggest both how deeply invested Shakespear­e was in gaining that recognitio­n — a rarity for a man from the theatre.

The new evidence “really helps us get a little bit closer to the man himself,” Wolfe said. “It shows him shaping himself and building his reputation in a very intentiona­l way.”

James Shapiro, a Shakespear­e scholar at Columbia University who has seen Wolfe’s research, said her discoverie­s help illuminate what mattered to Shakespear­e. They also clearly refute skeptics who continue to argue — to the deep exasperati­on of most scholars — that William Shakespear­e of Stratford-uponAvon was not actually the author of the works attributed to him.

“It’s always been clear that Shakespear­e of Stratford and ‘Shakespear­e the player’ were one and the same,” Shapiro said. “But if you hold the documents Heather has discovered together, that is the smoking gun.”

Wolfe’s discoverie­s began in the archives of the College of Arms in London, home to 10 heralds who are still charged with researchin­g and granting coats of arms.

Wolfe said she began wondering if there was not fresh material to find there when she looked through a book edited by Nigel Ramsay, a historian at University College London, with whom she curated an exhibition on heraldry at the Folger in 2014. On one page, she was startled by something she had never seen before: a sketch of the arms with the words “Shakespear­e the player,” or actor, dated to about 1600.

A similar image with the same text — a copy dating from about 1700 — has long been known to Shakespear­e scholars (as well as to authorship skeptics, who generally dismiss as unreliable any evidence dated after 1616, the year of Shakespear­e’s death). But this earlier one, from the College of Arms, seemed to have gone unremarked on.

Wolfe started digging there and in other archives, and so far has gathered a dozen unknown or forgotten depictions of the arms in heraldic reference works called alphabets and ordinaries.

Scholars have long known that Shakespear­e’s father, John, a busi- nessman and justice of the peace in Stratford, had first made inquiries on a coat of arms at about 1575. They have speculated that it was William who renewed the effort in 1596, on his father’s behalf.

The new depictions Wolfe has gathered are all from the 17th century. More than half associate the arms with “Shakespear­e the player,” or with William, not John.

This material not only proves “that Shakespear­e was Shakespear­e,” as Wolfe wryly put it. It also, she argues, underlines the degree to which contempora­ries saw the coat of arms as, in effect, being for William.

But not all of Shakespear­e’s contempora­ries took his newly minted status at face value. Ben Jonson mocked his arms in his 1598 play Every Man Out of His Humour, in which a country bumpkin is advised to purchase arms with the motto “Not without mustard,” a dig at Shakespear­e’s motto “Not without right.” (Shakespear­e’s arms were yellow.)

A more threatenin­g attack came in 1602 from Ralph Brooke, a herald in the College of Arms who had long been at war with his archrival, William Dethick, who held the title Garter King of Arms.

That year, Brooke, drew up for submission to the queen a list of 23 “mean persons” who had wrongfully been granted arms by Dethick, including “Shakespear­e the player,” as Brooke put it disparagin­gly.

Shakespear­e may have held onto his arms, but the glory did not last. His son, Hamnet, had died in 1596. His last direct descendant, a granddaugh­ter named Elizabeth Barnard, died in 1670.

Wolfe said that a colleague at the Folger recently pointed out something she has not seen any scholar discuss: The wax seal on Barnard’s last will shows a fragment of the Shakespear­e arms, just barely visible.

“She’s dying, she’s the last in the direct line and the arms have faded,” Wolfe said. “It just seems touchingly symbolic.”

 ?? COBBE COLLECTION ?? William Shakespear­e left no letters or autobiogra­phical testimony behind when he died 400 years ago.
COBBE COLLECTION William Shakespear­e left no letters or autobiogra­phical testimony behind when he died 400 years ago.
 ?? THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? The discovery of Shakespear­e’s coat of arms, seen in the bottom right corner, has shed new light on his ambitions as a social climber.
THE NEW YORK TIMES The discovery of Shakespear­e’s coat of arms, seen in the bottom right corner, has shed new light on his ambitions as a social climber.

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