SOF Congratulates Honorary Trustee Mark Rylance on Oscar Win
The Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship congratulates Mark Rylance, Shakespeare authorship doubter and SOF Honorary Lifetime Trustee, for winning the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor in
The Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship congratulates Mark Rylance, Shakespeare authorship doubter and SOF Honorary Lifetime Trustee, for winning the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor in
At school and college in Leeds and Reading in the England of 1960s and 70s, all my tutors tended to concentrate on Shakespeare’s work, not
In school we were introduced to Shakespeare’s sonnets with the usual explanation: Shakespeare wrote them as “poetic exercises on stock themes” to show off to
Following the success of the 2015 Authorship Conference, the Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship will for the first time sponsor a summer seminar in authorship studies at
February 2, 2016 I was born at the end of the European War in 1945, into an English literary family with connections to the Bloomsbury
January 26, 2019 Obediently and happily I followed the pattern of understanding the Bard’s life at my University of Innsbruck in the seventies. Absorbing everything
January 19, 2016 In the October 1991 issue of The Atlantic was an exchange between Tom Bethell and Irvin Matus about the author of the
January 12, 2016 When I was a teenager growing up in Northern California at the dawning of the Age of Aquarius, Shakespeare was Leonard Whiting
January 5, 2016 Soon after reading Julius Caesar in Junior High school I became a ‘Bardolator.’ Later, while taking Latin, I immersed myself in the
December 29, 2015 When I was ten, my father purchased a set of classics bound in rich green leather with gold leaf edges. The volumes
December 22, 2015 I read Charlton Ogburn’s The Mysterious William Shakespeare as a graduate student in English. I recall that as I read, the coincidences
Cheryl Eagan-Donovan, director of the Oxfordian film Nothing is Truer than Truth, met with Sir Derek Jacobi, also an Oxfordian, regarding her film on a
December 8, 2015 I am greatly indebted to the late Joseph Sobran for introducing me to the Shakespeare authorship question. It was his columns in
November 20, 2015 When I was about 11 or 12, we read Julius Caesar in junior high. When I tried to find out about the
SOF Launches New Series of Essays on “How I Became an Oxfordian” November 20, 2015 — The Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship (SOF) welcomes Bob Meyers,
The Fall 2015 issue of The Shakespeare Oxford Newsletter has been published, and is available online. “My ‘From the Editor’ column usually goes inside the
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