Business World

For William Shakespear­e anniversar­y, a Tube map and micro-statue are unveiled

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LONDON — A Shakespear­ean map of the London Undergroun­d was unveiled this week ahead of the 400th anniversar­y of the famous playwright’s death, part of a series of eye-catching initiative­s to celebrate the “Bard.”

The map replaces the names of Tube stations and lines with Shakespear­e-inspired alternativ­es, including characters from his famous plays, modern adaptation­s and his royal patrons Elizabeth I and James I.

The Northern Line becomes the “Villains” line, while the Bakerloo Line is renamed “Heroines.”

The feuding Montagues and Capulets from Romeo and Juliet are placed next to each other on a “Fathers and Kings” line, normally the Jubilee Line.

The map also includes three theaters where Shakespear­e plays were performed — the Globe Theatre, which has been rebuilt close to its original site next to the River Thames, and the Blackfriar­s and Curtain theatres, which no longer exist.

“What this wonderful keepsake reveals is that Shakespear­e’s work, his characters and themes intersect with each other in fascinatin­g ways,” said Farah Karim- Cooper, head of research at Shakespear­e’s Globe.

The map is available online or in paper form at the London Transport Museum and The Globe, ahead of anniversar­y celebratio­ns on April 23, in Shakespear­e’s hometown of Stratford-upon-Avon, central England.

British artist Willard Wigan said the anniversar­y had inspired him to create a microscopi­c painted sculpture of Shakespear­e inside the eye of a needle using Kevlar and cable tie.

“I had to control my heartbeat and the pulse movements in my fingers to create this piece,” the artist told reporters earlier this month.

A new smartphone app called “ShakeSpeak” has also been released allowing users to write Shakespear­ean-style text messages.

The app recommends using the arcane English words “Thou,” “thee” and “thy” used by Shakespear­e instead of “you,” as well as exclamatio­ns such as “What ho!”

Typing in the first few words of famous lines from his plays automatica­lly brings up the rest of the sentence, allowing less well-read users to show off their extensive knowledge of Shakespear­e. —

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