Shakespeare’s sonnets come to life in new app

Shakespeare’s sonnets come to life in new app
Updated 22 May 2013
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Shakespeare’s sonnets come to life in new app

Shakespeare’s sonnets come to life in new app

TORONTO: A new app launched on Monday aims to bring William Shakespeare’s sonnets to the masses with the help of short films starring stage actors performing them in front of New York landmarks. The Sonnet Project is a free app for the iPhone and iPad that showcases the bard’s poetry through films of up to two minutes and performances by Tony-Award winning actors Joanna Gleason and Cady Huffman, among others.
“Shakespeare gets a bad rap. A lot of people say ‘I don’t like Shakespeare, he’s over my head,’ or ‘Shakespeare is boring,’” said Ross Williams, the artistic director of the New York Shakespeare Exchange, the non-profit organization behind The Sonnet Project. “I wondered what happens if we share Shakespeare in really easily digestible chunks so people can get used to having him in their lives?” he added.
Shakespeare’s 154 sonnets, first published in 1609 explore themes such as the love, beauty, and death. Different locations across New York were selected for each sonnet, including the World Trade Center Memorial and the Brooklyn Bridge.