Thursday was Valentine’s Day and our school’s preview for Hamlet. In the spirit of both of these occasions I decided to turn to the cast and ask them about their first memory of Shakespeare (which often occurs in school) and what they love about the Bard.

Thomas Barber (Ghost): As far as I can remember I was about 13 and my father had borrowed a BBC audio recording of The Merchant of Venice from the local library. Upon listening to it I was struck by the pathos of Shylock’s character and the immense external forces (religious intolerance, tradition and social standing etc.) acting on him and rendering him a villain in the eyes of the Christian citizenry of Venice. I was resolved to try and shark up a list of lawless resolutes of my own to put together some scenes for our local SGCNZ competition. We did and got to Wellington, and some of us would have gone on to the two week thingy [he means NSSP?] but were too young at the time.
The works remind me that there is a chain of connection, understanding and humanity that stretches back centuries and even millennia – the fact that we perform his plays today, and that Seneca for example was popular in his time is incredible. The sheer liveliness and grab-bag of mixed human emotions, when carefully brought out on the stage is powerful stuff. The rhythms and variety of the speech just sounds good on an almost visceral level too, bit clichéd but it really is like jazz or any other kind of complex musical form. I must’ve gone around for a couple of weeks muttering that line of Horatio’s about the ‘moist star upon whose influence Neptune’s empire stands’ simply for the pleasure of saying it.
Maddie Brooks Gillespie (Player Queen—who is still in high school!): So, my first experience with Shakespeare was 7 years ago. For my 9th Birthday, my Grandfather Eric Brooks sent me a copy of Romeo and Juliet, along with the Baz Luhrmann film version (because this is the only reasonable gift for your 9 year old granddaughter). I was hooked straight away, and have been ever since. E.B passed away last year, just after I got selected for YSC, which is going to be such an amazing experience that I never would be getting to do without him, so it feels very special. I’m actually going to be using the film of Romeo + Juliet at a fundraising event in the next month of so to help me get to the Globe. The first time I performed in a Shakespeare was when I was 11 as Puck in the SGCNZ Primarily Playing With Shakespeare production of Midsummer Night’s Dream, followed closely by Prince Edward in Richard III with the Bacchanals.
Elsie Bollinger (Rosencrantz): When we were kids, I must have been 5 or 6, Mum and Dad sat us down and explained that we were going to a play. It was written by a man named Shakespeare, and though it was written in English, we weren’t going to understand it. Because of this Mum proceeded to give us a summary of As You Like It in the car on the way there. When we arrived and looked at the programs with Much Ado About Nothing splashed on the cover we had to accept that we weren’t going to understand what was going on for the next couple of hours. However it was the opposite. The play was set in a tent on a field and when the soldiers returned from the war at the beginning of the play it was a rugby team carrying Claudio on their back. I still remember it clearly. I also remember the scenes where Benedict and Beatrice spy on their friends respectively and discover that they have feelings for one another. There were tables and chairs, probably in preparation for Hero’s wedding, that the lovers scrambled under and over. It was lots of fun. When our company The Candle Wasters was first formed and we sat around thinking of what Shakespeare play we would adapt into a webseries, Sally and I told this same story. We then made Nothing Much to Do, and the soldiers became soccer players, inspired by that production. It may have even been a Summer Shakespeare that we saw [it was!].
Shakespeare is important now because it’s still relevant and that’s fascinating. Humans haven’t changed terribly much in 400 years, and there’s a comfort in that when you’re discussing emotions like love and grief. It’s satisfying to perform and communicate to a modern audience what was also being said to the Elizabethans. What I love about Shakespeare’s texts is the more you delve into them the more interesting they become. I am constantly astounded by how accurately Shakespeare captured the human condition. Because that will always be relevant it will always be interesting, and people will continue tell his stories.

Sally Bollinger (Guildenstern): [Sally and Elsie are sisters and have the same story, but I had to include it twice because it’s so good. Also I love the different perspectives.] My first experience of Shakespeare was Wellington Summer Shakespeare, Much Ado, when I was about 10. My parents said we’re going to see a play that is in English but you won’t understand (which sounded pretty stupid to me) then they accidentally read us a plot summary of As You Like It. Loved the play anyway. I also spent a lot of my final year at high school in art class doing a ten-page full colour Hamlet comic.

Andrew Clarke (First Player): So my first experience of Shakespeare was probably in my final year of Primary school. Our school did incredibly condensed musical version of Midsummer Nights Dream (it lifted the majority of the lines from the play, simplifying the language). I suppose my first proper experience of Shakespeare would be performing in Sheilah Winn (student directed Taming of the Shrew and Teacher directed Much Ado About Nothing).
Daniel Daigle (Laertes): My first literal experience with Shakespeare was learning about soliloquies in the 8th grade, and I had to memorize Puck’s final speech in Midsummer. I’d say my first true experience was my freshman year of college when I worked with the Actors from the London Stage to produce a 5 person production of Midsummer. I got to play Puck, Theseus, Snout, and Peaseblossom. It was super awesome because I was not only learning from English actors who had RSC credits, but we toured the state teaching workshops and performing for high schoolers. What I love most about Shakespeare is… they’re good shows? They’re fun and challenging. They’re timeless . . . I just enjoy it.
Stevie Hancox-Monk (Hamlet): When I was really young I had an obsession with tiny objects – I had an old ink press board that I used to display all my tiny finds, each in a tiny cubby hole. My parents had this miniature complete works of Shakespeare and I would take a few plays and carry them around with me everywhere and read them at night. My favourite ones to steal were As You Like It, Hamlet, and Antony & Cleopatra. I’m not sure where all of them are now, but I did find a mini Henry IV Pt 1 in a bag a few years ago. My parents also used to tell each of us (as we fell asleep at night) “good night sweet prince, and flights of angels sing thee to thy rest.”
As a 14 year old, I played Gower in our school’s UOSWSF entry of Pericles. I wore tails, a top hat, and carried a cane – which I absolutely loved.
Simon Howard (Francisco): My first school experience with Shakespeare would be studying Romeo and Juliet at GCSE level English Literature. Acting out the balcony scene I recall and watching the Leo Di Caprio film version. At A Level English Literature we studied Othello and got to go and watch the RSC 2009 version at northern stage in Newcastle. I loved studying that play. My best school experience though was doing Henry V’s once more unto the breach as part of a fundraiser for an expedition me and 15 other students went on to Everest base camp in 2009. It was a night of poetry, Python and the Bard and I got asked to do it a few more times that year for various events in the town. Strangely in four years of studying drama/performing arts (ages 14-18) we never once touched Shakespeare. Lots of Kafka, Brecht, Stanislavski and the like though…
Dylan Hutton (Horatio): My very first experience probably came at about 15 at high school. I’d neither read nor seen any Shakespeare at the point. I was cast in a 5 minute scene from A Midsummer Nights Dream for the SGCNZ festival where I played a very awkward Bottom who didn’t understand the language or know how to sing. It sucked. And the whole thing was Bollywood themed for some reason.
I’ve recently been thinking that because around 400 years one man decided he had some stories to tell (and wanted to make some money), my life is where it is now. The way that Shakespeare has shaped and influenced the history of theatre and the course of my life in arts is massive. I owe some of my passions and closest friends to William Shakespeare, his works, and the history of them. I love that there is such a wide variety of magnificent plays with relevant themes, relatable characters and the most beautiful language ever written that is still relatable and poignant today.
Isabella Murray (Marcellus): My first Shakespeare experience was part of an acting course I did, we did scenes from Midsummer Night’s Dream three times over the three years. My first school Shakespeare experience was studying it in English, also Midsummer Night’s Dream. We had to learn a monologue off by heart, and perform a scene with others. My teacher emphasised the performative nature of it. No focus was given to the verse though in any of the Shakespeare work I did until uni.
I always really loved Shakespeare. I was part of the Shakespeare committee at my school. I think the stories and characters are inherently wonderful, but it’s also fantastic to have plays and characters that have been interpreted in so many ways. They’re works that keep evolving as they continue to be performed. The biggest change since school is I’ve been able to appreciate the actual text now. So much of Shakespeare at school was just trying to interpret the text in a more contemporary way that what the actual text said, and the verse was overlooked. So I think I appreciate the actual writing more now.
Jenny Nimon (Ophelia): My first experience with Shakespeare was a 15 minute scene of Macbeth when I was in Year 11 for SGCNZ UOSWSF. I played one of the witches and we did it in full goth with Scottish accents, and took it down to Nationals. It was cut together with a Lady Macbeth scene, so we had an all female cast.
Kent Norris (Barnardo): My first ever experience with Shakespeare was in Year 9, at Paraparaumu College… getting involved in the SGCNZ University of Otago Sheilah Winn Shakespeare Kapiti Regional Festival in 2015, in which I played Solinus, The Duke of Ephesus in the final scene of The Comedy of Errors. Literally the only reason I went along to the meeting was because I was trying to impress someone at the time; we somehow won the 15 Minute Direct Entry to Nationals and from there I was awaken to just how awesome and spectacular the works of the Bard were!
I’m pretty much a Shakespearaholic at this point. The whole ‘Shakespeare obsession’ probably really took off at the end 2016 and has only grown stronger and more interesting from there. I view the Bard as one of the most influential and important individual to have “livèd in the tide of times.” I dream of one day being an actor in a travelling Shakespeare Company, or even acting at The Globe Theatre in London or the RSC. I can’t wait to one day play Iago, Richard III, Edmund and Bottom, the Weaver.
Ivana Palezevic (Polonius): It actually was Hamlet. I was in year 9 English class and we had a visiting teacher from the UK. And I remember that instead of reading the text quietly amongst ourselves and discussing themes (as my other friends in other classes did) this guy actually read the text to us. We did several scenes and he would act them out and give the characters life and personality. Suddenly everyone was excited to come to English class just to hear how the story ended. And for me as a performer I was mesmorised. His ‘to be or not to be’ speech he just took his time and looked us in the eye and we were there with him. Suddenly Shakespeare was fun. That’s the power of speaking it versus reading it. He encouraged us all to explore Shakespeare more outside of class and see all the wonderful characters he has created. And since then I’ve picked up the complete works in the school library and read more and more. Got involved with Sheilah Winn and the rest is history. Sorry that is quite a long story. Perhaps appropriate for who I play and I wish i could remember the teacher’s name.
I have really come to respect what Shakespeare represents. This person has written, in the most articulate way possible, what we as humans experience on the sometimes most indescribable level. How do you express the complicated emotion in that moment? Well, this person did. And even had to make up words to achieve it sometimes. But what this writer has also achieved for centuries is bring together people to tell the same over and over again. The issues of the story are the same in the 16th century. And always will be. Even in 2019. The best part for me in performing Shakespeare, is meeting the people who want to share this story with me. In doing Hamlet with Summer Shakespeare, with a cast of up to 20 people, all with extraordinary backgrounds, different experiences and values, we are all together over the summer sharing something in common. The plays of Shakespeare, which are universal in theme and relationship. No matter who you are. It’s a common ground between us as performers and that perhaps is the great genius of the work. And lastly, I am told he has written over 1000 characters in his career. I hope throughout mine to have a chance to meet them all.
Jane Paul (Gravedigger): My first experience was A Midsummer Nights Dream in year 9 English class. I remember feeling very confused by all the plots.
Mitch Tawhi Thomas (Claudius): When I was about 9, my grandmother had a big old dusty, thick book full of “Shakespeare’s stories” – about 5 page versions of most of the high flyers, separated into comedy, history, tragedy. Complete with old school illustrations. About a year later I got the complete works and would dip in and out if it. Marvelling at the language. I was the only one in my whānau that was interested. Years late at high school, the staff had a Shakespeare day and the whole school – like frickin everyone! – dressed as different characters and went about the day except at lunchtime we assembled in the hall got a massive “banquet” and the teachers performed an excerpt. Those were the days!!!!
Maggie White (Gertrude): My first Shakespeare memory was when I was about 10 years old. My Granddad (who at this point was in the early stages of dementia), had a lot of books, and was a very well read man. One day, in a moment of lucidity, he handed me a copy of the Complete Works (an Oxford edition from 1962). All he said was “You’re going to need this”. I had heard of Shakespeare before this of course, but this was the first time I actually looked at his work on the page. Then, when I was in high school we would do scenes and soliloquies. I explored Lady MacBeth, Helena from MSND. I loved (and still love) the words, how they feel and taste. How much they express. I had a wonderful drama teacher, Dr Bronwyn Fenwick who really began to open Shakespeare up for me. We never actually did a full Shakespeare as a school, but we did to a production of Jean Betts’ Revenge of the Amazons, in which I played Helena. I loved it! I think what I love most about playing Shakespeare is that you get to tell stories through characters who are pushed to the extremes of feeling and circumstance. Shipwrecks, storms, wars, love, loss, grief, hatred, fear. The stakes are so high, the passion so consuming. I love that I get to play characters who are experiencing something so profound that it comes out of them as poetry.
Sam Tippet (Stage Manager): My primary school did a version of Midsummer but it was ‘A Kid Summer Night’s Dream’ hahahaha apart from that, Sheilah Winn in 2010.
Pauline Ward (ASM): I used to have a picture book version of Midsummer Night’s Dream that I’d read every time I ran out of books, and the first play I remember seeing was Hamlet, just after the Christchurch earthquakes. The director’s son was playing Hamlet but he died in the CCTV building, so the director ended up playing the role himself.

*SGCNZ refers to Shakespeare Globe Centre New Zealand: http://www.sgcnz.org.nz/
“Sheilah Winn” is the University of Otago Sheilah Winn Shakespeare Festival (UOSWSF).
**The production of Much Ado that Elsie and Sally refer to was the 2005 Wellington Summer Shakespeare, directed by Jacqui Coats and Rachel Henry.





































































































