The eBard of Avon? Absolutely, thanks to a project just launched by PhD candidate Noam Lior (BA 2005 Woodsworth, MA 2009) and alumni partners. Lior met business associate Tim Chisholm when they were both drama undergrads at University College; years later they’ve teamed up to create ebook versions of Shakespeare’s plays that integrate video with the text. Not merely clips, but full-length performances of every scene. The reader can use a split-screen view to follow both performance and written play simultaneously; icons link to audio synopses or character lists while embedded notes explore staging tips or recurring themes. A free smartphone app offers the text alone.
“Each play was made to live on its feet, in a live performance,” explains Lior, who is writing his dissertation on editing Shakespeare. The partners hired actors, including Daina Valiulis (BA 2005 UC) and Trevor Jablonowski (BA 2007 Woodsworth) who later joined the team as co-producers. Their intended audience is high-school students, so of course their first three projects, available now at shakespeareatplay.ca, were Romeo and Juliet, Macbeth and Hamlet. Othello and A Midsummer Night’s Dream are up next.
Watch a demo of the Shakespeare At Play app:
Video by Tim Chisholm
Recent Posts
U of T’s 197th Birthday Quiz
Test your knowledge of all things U of T in honour of the university’s 197th anniversary on March 15!
Are Cold Plunges Good for You?
Research suggests they are, in three ways
Work Has Changed. So Have the Qualities of Good Leadership
Rapid shifts in everything from technology to employee expectations are pressuring leaders to constantly adapt