Promotion

Shakespeare Week

publication date: Mar 14, 2015

Shakespeare WeekMonday 16 March marks the start of Shakespeare Week, the national celebration that aims to bring the magic of Shakespeare into the lives of children as young as five.

Shakespeare's creative legacy will be unleashed in nearly 7,000 primary schools across the UK. More than one million children will have a fun encounter with the Bard thanks to the campaign, organised by the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust in partnership with more than 100 arts and heritage venues.

New contemporary content and experiences created exclusively for Shakespeare Week are accessible to schools wherever they are, starting with a Passport to Shakespeare, illustrated by children's author, Marcia Williams, which is packed with activities and ideas for how to get involved.

Two new films for children, starring children, will be screened in schools and libraries this week: Unwillingly To School will appear in more than 50 libraries; and Short Form Film's children's adaptation of Shakespeare's Henry V, narrated by actor Tom Hiddleston, will be available to every school via Digital Theatre Plus.

In libraries, family-friendly activities will include hunting for Shakespeare's characters, mask-making based on the animals in Shakespeare's plays, costume and set design challenges, and using a scroll to write your own play.  There will be a Shakespeare-themed pack for Chatterbooks, the UK's largest network of children's reading groups, from The Reading Agency.

Families can get involved on the Shakespeare Week website with free activity sheets and games to get to know Shakespeare at home. For younger children there's design and make activities, while older children can try Tudor recipes and explore a map of Shakespeare's England.

Attractions around the UK planning Shakespeare Week activities include:

  • Experience a Macbeth-themed mock trial in a real courtroom at Galleries Of Justice Museum in Nottingham.
  • Discover the world of the Tudorsby taking part in costume and prop making activities at The Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge.
  • At Westminster Abbey, explore Shakespeare's history plays in the place where two of Shakespeare's kings are buried.
  • At the heart of the celebrations in Stratford-upon-Avon, help to create a Forest of Arden in the gardens of Anne Hathaway's Cottage.
  • Embark on a trail around the galleries at Plymouth City Museum And Art Gallery to search for paintings of Shakespeare's contemporaries.
  • Look out for some of Shakespeare's best-loved characters as they live out their famous stories at Tudor House & Garden in Southampton.
  • Watch a hilarious musical adaptation of Twelfth Night, performed by children from Overchurch Primary School at Cheshire's Tatton Park.
  • Backing Shakespeare Week with exclusive content available nationwide are: Walker Books, Digital Theatre Plus, Koche Media and Horrible Histories, The Society of Chief Librarians (SCL), the Association of Senior Children's and Education Libraries (ASCEL), First News, Fun Kids Radio, Short Form Film, Chatterbooks from the Reading Agency.

To find out more about what's happening in primary schools and cultural attractions in your area, visit  Shakespeare Week.