About the Festival

The World Shakespeare Festival (WSF) is a celebration of Shakespeare as the world’s playwright and we hope you will come and join us. 

Produced by the Royal Shakespeare Company, in an unprecedented collaboration with leading UK and international arts organisations, and with Globe to Globe, a major international programme produced by Shakespeare’s Globe, it’s the biggest celebration of Shakespeare ever staged.

Almost 60 partners are coming together to bring the Festival alive.  Thousands of artists from around the world will take part in almost 70 productions, plus supporting events and exhibitions, right across the UK, including London, Stratford-upon-Avon, Newcastle/Gateshead, Birmingham, Wales and Scotland and online.

Over one million tickets are on sale. It runs from 23 April to November 2012 and forms part of London 2012 Festival, which is the culmination of the Cultural Olympiad, bringing leading artists from all over the world together in a UK-wide festival this summer.   

The World Shakespeare Festival is supported by the National Lottery through the Olympic Lottery Distributor, by Arts Council England and by BP, as Founding Presenting Partner.

As well as showcasing the best of UK and international creative talent, the World Shakespeare Festival encourages the creativity of young people, emerging artists and amateur companies.

Through research with the British Council we know that 50% of the world’s children study Shakespeare in the classroom - that’s over 64 million children worldwide. The Festival is creating a community of teachers across the world who are passionate about teaching Shakespeare, creating a legacy for young people everywhere.
Iraqi Theatre Company reheasing
Hundreds of teachers and thousands of young people in the UK are involved, along with schools in 7 countries (Oman, India, Brazil, Czech Republic, Hong Kong, USA, South Africa). One of the highlights of the education work is the Worlds Together international education conference in September, which brings together education professionals, international artists and academics to share their practice and investigate learning through Shakespeare and the arts.

This is the first ever collaboration between Tate Modern, National Theatre, the British Museum, British Council and the Royal Shakespeare Company.

The Festival celebrates amateur theatre right across the UK with 7200 amateur theatre makers in 260 groups across the UK taking part in Open Stages, working with the RSC and nine partner theatres around the country to share skills and expertise to stage their own Shakespeare-inspired productions. Open Stages culminates in a national celebration of amateur theatre in July at the Royal Shakespeare Company’s home in Stratford-upon-Avon.

Wherever you are in the world, you can take part in the Festival through a new digital platform, My Shakespeare, launched to mark the start of the Festival on April 23rd. This major new project will create a global digital conversation, creating a view of Shakespeare through a twenty-first century lens. The site will include guest bloggers, a unique online search of Shakespeare’s plays, a chance to create your own visualisation and new artists’ commissions released onto the site.

Produced by the Royal Shakespeare Company, the World Shakespeare Festival has been under development since 2007. Almost all the programme is specially commissioned by the RSC or developed through extraordinary UK and international collaborations.

This unprecedented artistic collaboration will seed new international and national partnerships and inspire new ways of working. It will bring Shakespeare to a wider audience through live performance, education, events, exhibitions and digital projects. Many of the new commissions created for the Festival will have a future life and we will begin a global conversation about Shakespeare through My Shakespeare, creating an understanding of his place in the 21st Century.

Watch an interview with Festival Director Deborah Shaw talk about the World Shakespeare Festival.

World Shakespeare Festival partners include:

  • Almeida Theatre
  • Anglo Mexican Foundation
  • Artistes, Producteurs, Associés (Tunisia)
  • The Barbican
  • Barcelona Internacional Teatre (Spain)
  • BBC
  • Birmingham Repertory Theatre Company
  • Brighton Festival; the British Council
  • The British Museum
  • British Film Institute
  • Chekhov International Theatre Festival (Russia)
  • Companhia BufoMecânica (Brazil)
  • Compañia Nacional de Teatro (Mexico)
  • Contact, Manchester; Dmitry Krymov’s Laboratory (Russia)
  • dreamthinkspeak
  • Edinburgh International Festival
  • Hall for Cornwall
  • House of Fairy Tales
  • Iraqi Theatre Company (Iraq)
  • London International Festival of Theatre
  • Lyric Theatre, Belfast
  • National Student Drama Festival
  • National Theatre
  • National Theatre of Scotland
  • National Theatre Wales
  • New Wolsey Theatre, Ipswich
  • Newcastle University
  • The Ninagawa Company (Japan)
  • Northern Sinfonia
  • Northern Stage
  • The Nuffield, Southampton
  • Oily Cart
  • Pilot
  • Questors Theatre
  • Riverside Studios
  • Roundhouse
  • Royal Opera House
  • Royal Shakespeare Company
  • Sage Gateshead
  • School of Dramatic Art Theatre (Moscow)
  • The Shakespeare Birthplace Trust
  • Shakespeare’s Globe
  • Sherman Cymru, Cardiff
  • Squidsoup
  • Stratford Circus
  • Tate Modern
  • Teatr Warszawa (Poland)
  • Theatr Genedlaethol, Wales
  • Theatre Royal Newcastle
  • Voluntary Arts Network
  • The Wooster Group (USA)

Festival Director's Blog

Follow the World Shakespeare Festival journey with Festival Director Deborah Shaw's blog, taking us behind the scenes of the Festival as many of the WSF productions continue their creative journeys both in the UK and abroad.

Check here for updates, photos, videos and more information on the companies and venues involved in the Festival, and let us know what you’re excited about seeing as part of WSF in the comments. We’d love to hear your thoughts!

 

Festival Director's Blog: Wondering...

As director of The Dark Side of Love Renato Rocha visits London to work with his company of teenagers at the Roundhouse, he guest- blogs his thoughts and impressions as a Brazilian artist far from home…

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Festival Director's Blog: 'Till the sky falls down to the earth'

Stories, stories, swirl around in the Baghdad dust. Folk stories, the stories of Mohammed, the betrayal of Hussein, rumour, gossip and conspiracy theories.

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Festival Director's Blog: In the Red Zone

Next day we have an invitation to lunch at the British Embassy with the Director of the Iraqi office of the British Council and to meet the Ambassador.

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Festival Director's Blog: Baghdad

Last time I flew into the city it was late at night.

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Festival Director's Blog: Getting started...

The messages start to come through from Comms: Deborah, you are going to start your blog, aren’t you?

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Designer's Dreams and Doodles

Tom Piper is the Olivier Award-winning Associate Designer at the Royal Shakespeare Company. He is designing Iqbal Khan's production of Much Ado About Nothing for the Courtyard Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon, and the Noel Coward Theatre, London next year.

Tom is also working alongside the team designing Shakespeare: Staging the World - The BP Exhibition at the British Museum as part of the World Shakespeare Festival.

Tom's blog will take us from his initial research, designs and ideas through to the opening of Much Ado About Nothing on 26 July and the opening of the British Museum exhibition on 19 July.

 

Designer's Dreams and Doodles: Costume design

We have had Himani, the costume designer we met in Delhi, over for a week of meetings and costume research.

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Designer's Dreams and Doodles: 'What is this made of?'

Have to get something ready for next Tuesday when Pete Griffin (Production Manager) and Alan Bartlett (Head of Construction and Technical Design) are coming to look at the model.

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Designer's Dreams and Doodles: Producer's Perspective

RSC Producer Kevin Fitzmaurice offers his perspective on our recent research trip to India.

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Designer's Dreams and Doodles: 'If in doubt, back to the text...'

If in doubt, back to the text. Have had another trip to Stratford to check seating layouts and discuss how we can get the Indian costume designer over to work on the project.

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Designer's Dreams and Doodles: Coming home

On way back now and trying to take stock of it all after two more days of sensual bombardment.

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Designer's Dreams and Doodles: Theatre of Dreams

Weird day of competing impressions: beginning in crowded active muslim tombs, throwing petals on the grave with more people than seems possible to fit into a 12’x 8’ space and still have room for the shrine

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Designer's Dreams and Doodles: Wardrobe Malfunction

Delhi hardcore! Into the old town and the most extraordinary bombardment of the senses.

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Designer's Dreams and Doodles - a country of contrasts

Ok you either love or hate India and at the moment I feel I love it.

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Designer's Dreams and Doodles: India bound

Delhi at 3am we are met as arranged at the airport and discover that while we have been airborne Iqbal has got his visa approved at the last gasp, so will be joining us as planned.

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Designer's Dreams and Doodles: Preparing for India

I am off to India this week to research for Much Ado About Nothing.

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Designer's Dreams and Doodles: Endless Possibilities

A trip to Stratford before we go to India to show Iqbal and Kieran, the lighting designer, around The Courtyard.

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Interview with WSF Director


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