The British Shakespeare Association is a professional association of teachers, researchers, theatre practitioners, writers and enthusiasts. The BSA is a registered charity and its aims are educational – ‘to promote and foster a better understanding of Shakespeare and his work’. Read more about us »
John is Emeritus Professor of English Studies at the university of Stirling. He has published widely in the area of Shakespeare Studies and is the editor of Alternative Shakespeares, a series that had a fundamental effect on the academic study of Shakespeare in Britain, alongside Dollimore and
Read more »Roger is a giant in the world of Shakespearean Education. A teacher for the whole of his life, he has touched thousands of young people with his immense experience and insights. He has given the greatest gift any educator can give to his students: inspiration. Such a gift to these many young Shakespeareans
Read more »For almost 40 years Sarah Stanton shaped the field of Shakespeare studies through her work as chief commissioning editor at Cambridge University Press. Her faith, encouragement and knowledge has been both a source of inspiration for many of those thinking and writing about Shakespeare. Whenever she is
Read more »Adrian Lester has become one of the most eminent Shakespearean actors of his generation. He first came to public attention for his stunning rendition of Rosalind in the famous all-male production of As You Like It by the Cheek By Jowl Theatre Company. Since then he has excelled in the roles
Read more »Dame Judi Dench is an Oscar award-winning film, stage and television actor. Her Shakespearean screen roles include Mistress Quickly and Hecuba in Kenneth Branagh’s Henry V and Hamlet, as well as her lauded appearance as Queen Elizabeth I in John Madden’s Shakespeare in Love
Read more »Cicely Berry is Director of Voice at the Royal Shakespeare Company, where, for forty-five years, she has played a vital role in forming and developing the company’s working practices. She has had an equally important impact on education and has also made Shakespeare’s language available beyond
Read more »Professor John Russell Brown, who died in August 2015, was a distinguished academic, dramaturg and theatre director. He established one of the country’s first university Drama departments at Birmingham and later ran the scripts department at the National Theatre. He also brought Shakespeare to the wider
Read more »R. A. Foakes, who died in December 2013, was a critic, textual scholar, and theatre historian. His landmark edition of Henslowe’s Diary, co-edited with R. T. Rickert in 1961, was an essential work of scholarship surpassing the edition by W. W. Greg. Out of print by the turn of the century, copies fetched
Read more »Terence Hawkes, who died in January 2014, was a Shakespeare scholar of international renown. He is best known for his pioneering work in the fields of Literary Presentism (including That Shakespeherian Rag, 1986, and Shakespeare in the Present, 2002) and for his influence on Literary Theory following
Read more »Sir Stanley Wells is Honorary President and Former Chairman of the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust.
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