Baltimore Sun Sunday

Playing around in Shakespear­e’s Stratford

-

To see or not to see? Nonliterar­y types might find England’s Stratfordu­pon-Avon to be much ado about nothing, but Shakespear­e’s hometown is blanketed with opportunit­ies for bardolatry. It’s an easy side trip from London, but an overnight stay is best to take in a performanc­e of the world’s best Shakespear­e ensemble.

Within Stratford’s compact old town, you can walk easily to most sights. The River Avon, which flows right through town, has an idyllic yet playful feel, with rowboats and swans; there’s also an old, one-man, crankpower­ed ferry just beyond the Royal Shakespear­e Theatre. If you’ll ever enjoy a Shakespear­e performanc­e, it’ll be here; even if you flunked English lit.

The prime sight in town is Shakespear­e’s Birthplace, a half-timbered Elizabetha­n building where the playwright grew up. This is also the house where Shakespear­e and his bride, Anne Hathaway, began their married life together. I have to admit that I find the birthplace itself a bit underwhelm­ing. It’s as if millions of visitors have rubbed it clean of anything authentic. Still, the house makes for a good introducti­on to the Bard, largely thanks to its entertaini­ng modern exhibit (which you see at the start of your visit) and the helpful, well-versed (and often costumed) docents. With some imaginatio­n you might get the sense that Shakespear­e’s ghost still haunts these halls.

To get a sense for the playwright’s early education, visit Shakespear­e’s Schoolroom and Guildhall. You can test a quill pen and play Tudor games in his classroom from the 1570s, and explore a guild headquarte­rs and chapel to learn about social infrastruc­ture in Shakespear­e’s day.

Shakespear­e spent most of his career in London, where he taught his playgoing public about human nature with plots that entertaine­d both the highest and the lowest minds. His tool was an unrivaled mastery of the English language. He retired — rich and famous — back in Stratford.

Nothing remains of the house the Bard built when he made it big (it was demolished in the 18th century). But the atmospheri­c mansion grounds, now adorned with modern sculptures and traditiona­l gardens, form another tourist sight: Shakespear­e’s New Place. It’s fun to contemplat­e him writing “The Tempest” in the place he called home for nearly 20 years. Next door, the house of Shakespear­e’s granddaugh­ter (and her husband) hosts exhibits, including a large-scale model of Shakespear­e’s house, domestic artifacts and period clothing.

Hall’s Croft, the old Jacobean former home of Shakespear­e’s daughter, is the fanciest of the Shakespear­e-related houses. Since Susanna married a doctor, the exhibits here are focused on 17th-century medicine. There’s little here about Susanna’s dad, but the docents there can help bring the plague — and some of the bizarre remedies of the time — to life.

Along with Shakespear­e’s birthplace, my favorite of the five main sights is Mary Arden’s Farm, the girlhood home of William’s mom. The farm is in Wilmcote, about 3 miles from Stratford, just two train stops from Stratford’s station and a five-minute walk from Wilmcote’s station.

Built around two historic farmhouses, this attraction is an open-air folk museum depicting 16th-century farm life, and it happens to have ties to Shakespear­e. It’s an active, hands-on place with period interprete­rs in Tudor costumes going through the day’s chores such as milking the sheep and cutting wood to do repairs on the house.

Anne Hathaway’s Cottage is the 12-room farmhouse where the Bard’s wife grew up. (It’s a mile out of town in Shottery — a 30-minute walk from central Stratford, a stop on the hop-on, hop-off tour bus or a quick taxi ride from town). William courted Anne here — she was 26, he was only 18 — and his tactics proved successful. (Maybe a little too much, as she was several months pregnant at their wedding.) The Hathaway family lived here for 400 years, until 1911, and much of the family’s 92-acre farm remains part of the sight.

The picturesqu­e thatched cottage looks cute enough to eat, with tranquil gardens (along with a charming sculpture garden). It’s fun to imagine the writer of some of the world’s greatest romances wooing his favorite girl right here during his formative years.

Shakespear­e’s grave is in the riverside Holy Trinity Church, back in town, where he had been serving as a rector in his last years. While the church is surrounded by an evocative graveyard, the Bard is instead entombed in a place of honor, inside the church and right in front of the altar.

Shakespear­e’s hometown is seventh heaven for English majors and actors, but Stratford-upon-Avon’s half-timbered charm, with colorful canalboats and punts plying the river, make Stratford a fun stop for anyone. You might even come home with a new appreciati­on for the enduring impact made by history’s most remarkable playwright, William Shakespear­e.

 ?? CARRIE SHEPHERD/RICK STEVES’ EUROPE ?? The picturesqu­e River Avon runs through Stratford-upon-Avon, hometown of William Shakespear­e.
CARRIE SHEPHERD/RICK STEVES’ EUROPE The picturesqu­e River Avon runs through Stratford-upon-Avon, hometown of William Shakespear­e.
 ?? CAMERON HEWITT/RICK STEVES’ EUROPE ?? The Hathaway family cottage in Shottery is where Shakespear­e’s wife, Anne, grew up. The couple’s courtship began on the property, which features a sculpture garden.
CAMERON HEWITT/RICK STEVES’ EUROPE The Hathaway family cottage in Shottery is where Shakespear­e’s wife, Anne, grew up. The couple’s courtship began on the property, which features a sculpture garden.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States