Good lord, I am exhausted reading your day's accomplishments!  But you are 
right:  this may be the most heartening message I have read in a long time.  
Let's have more of this, please?Heather DolstraSent from my Galaxy
-------- Original message --------From: Casey Caldwell via Winedale-l 
<[email protected]> Date: 4/24/26  12:20 PM  (GMT-05:00) To: 
"[email protected] Winedale" 
<[email protected]> Cc: Shakespeare at 
Winedale 1970-2000 alums <[email protected]>, Katy Reedy 
<[email protected]> Subject: [Winedale-l] About Shakespeare's Birthday Hi, 
all,I had a busy day on April 23rd, the day we traditionally celebrate as 
Shakespeare's birthday, and I found myself thinking about our Winedale family a 
lot throughout. In these dark times, I thought it might be nice to hear about 
it.I started my day teaching from Ian McEwan's What We Can Know, a 
(post-)post-apocalyptic novel that, at its heart, is about the role literature 
and literature professors can play after the world has collapsed. There are 
many allusions to Shakespeare in the novel and if you've not read it, I highly 
recommend you do. Yesterday, we focused on the novel's depiction of future 
college students' lack of interest in history and whether they saw themselves 
in these students—most said that in high school they found rote memorization 
boring but in college they were becoming more interested in history as a 
conversation and contested subject. A hopeful note!Next, I hosted a Shakespeare 
Sonnet Festival by the lake on our campus. Many students came out to read and 
discuss Shakespeare's sonnets on the grass by the lake. The day was beautiful, 
sunny and warm. If you're familiar with the weather in the Midwest, you know 
April (but also May) is the cruelest month, so these truly spring days must be 
cherished. I broke the ice by reading sonnet 98; I noted that I'm happily 
married to a wife that was nearby, so the spring day was actually a spring day 
for me, but that I had spent many wintery Aprils in my earlier life.  After, my 
Shakespeare course met to watch the Joel Coen film adaptation of Macbeth (with 
Denzel Washington and Francis McDormand). We read Macbeth a couple weeks ago 
and next week they'll be performing short dialogs from the play. The students 
really like the two lead performances, the creative choice with Kathryn Hunter 
as the witch(es), and what I called Coen's creation of a "Super Ross" whose 
motives seemed to transcended the world of the play.After a quick breather and 
snack bar, I went in to rehearsal for the English Players, a student group I 
direct that I have re-oriented around Winedale's learning through performance 
practices. We'll be putting on two scenes from The Tempest (a play I selected 
because we'll be taking students in the fall to the Stratford Festival in 
Ontario and it will be one of the performances they'll see). Last night we were 
playing with 3.2, the scene in which the drunken clowns brag about how much 
they can drink, plot the murder of Prospero, and rhapsodize about the isle 
being full of noises. We had good fun trying out different versions of 
Stephano's beating on Trinculo and thinking about how they advanced the story 
the story in different ways. Right now, she's flicking Trinculo on the nose in 
the belief that this is very intimidating. I remembered warmly David Ziegler's 
inimitable and drunken Borachio not wanting any colors colored in our 2015 
reunion Much Ado. I then had just enough time to walk-jog over to an auditorium 
in the student union where I was hosting a movie night. I was showing students 
the documentary, Grand Theft Hamlet, which follows two British actors during 
lockdown in 2021 attempting to put on a production of Hamlet in Grand Theft 
Auto Online. It's a funny and surprisingly touching look into two actors 
seeking to continue their art and find human connection during a time of 
isolation. An ensemble builds up around them in an inspiring way. The students 
loved it (plus the $200 worth of pizza and soda I supplied; I'd have included a 
keg of Shiner if the college would have let me; as an adjunct, I have my own 
version of the Sword of Damocles I must be ever-mindful of). Finally (and this 
may have been my favorite part of the day), I walked back across campus to the 
arts building for a staged reading of Macbeth. A student in my Shakespeare 
course told a friend with whom he shares strong Scottish lineage that we were 
reading Macbeth and they decided to do a reading of the play, just the two of 
them. Word of mouth spread, however, and this spontaneous event blossomed into 
fourteen students and two professors, homemade costumes, wooden swords, sound 
cues including a screeching owl, and a couple kilts. They improvised and 
improved all of this themselves in a truly ensemble spirit (with two Peter 
Quinces to guide the overall process). The pure spirit of play in the room 
would have been immediately recognizable for all of you. It was vivifying. I 
had no idea this was happening until my student told me about it a week or so 
ago; it was truly student created and led, I was merely a contingent factor. On 
my hour-long drive home last night, I was tearing up from the complex mix of 
emotions and exhaustion. This last event affected me the most. Thoughts swirled 
of the production of Twelfth Night my Winedale classmates and I put on after 
our 2003 summer and of James Loehlin attending our Midsummer the same day he'd 
had back surgery; of Doc and the first students originating Winedale in the 
same spirit of play and exploration and how the practical origins of the circle 
created a lasting ritual; of my children asleep at home with my wife who is 
also a Shakespearean and how I'm about the same age my dearly-departed father 
was when he came out to Winedale in 2003 and finally understood the life I'd 
chosen (Doc, he was a Vietnam vet and the bootcamp structure helped with that a 
lot!); and of just the simple joy I could see in the students' faces as they 
experienced Macbeth for the first time last night. As I write this, my 
daughter, Viola, is engaging her imagination with Play-Doh, creating something 
she is calling a "boody puppy," while our real puppy, Sebastian, dances about 
her feet. In these frightening days, some of the kids are alright. Thought 
you'd like to know.Taking pains to be vigitant,  Casey
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