LATimes
Alas, poor Shakespeare
Conspiracy theories about the authorship of his plays have gone  mainstream.
 
 


 
By James Shapiro  
April 11, 2010


Film director Roland Emmerich,  whose last effort was the apocalyptic 
"2012," has begun shooting "Anonymous." It  won't be another disaster movie -- 
except perhaps for English professors.  According to Emmerich, the film is 
"about how it came to be that William  Shakespeare was not the author of his 
plays," which, he says, turn out to have  been written by the "Earl of Oxford."

Emmerich calls "Anonymous" a  political thriller. "It's about who will 
succeed Elizabeth and the cause of that  thriller, the Essex Rebellion." The 
film, starring Vanessa Redgrave as Queen  Elizabeth and Rhys Ifans as the Earl 
of Oxford, will have "kings, queens, and  princes," he adds. "It's about 
illegitimate children, it's about incest. It's  about all of these elements 
which Shakespeare's plays have." 

Except, of  course, it's also about how Shakespeare didn't write those 
plays, indeed,  couldn't even write his own name.

The story behind this story dates back  to 1920, when J.T. Looney published 
" 'Shakespeare' Identified," the bible of  those who believe that the Earl 
of Oxford is the true author of Shakespeare's  plays. When Emmerich says his 
movie will be about incest and bastards, he means  that the story line 
follows a popular spinoff of Looney's undocumented theory,  in which the Earl 
of 
Oxford was not only the secret son of the not-so-virginal  Queen Elizabeth, 
but also, when he came of age, her lover. There's more fantasy:  the Earl 
of Southampton was their illegitimate child and likely heir to the  throne of 
England, until he was imprisoned for his role in the Essex Rebellion.  

And the explanation as to why Shakespeare would have gotten credit for  
plays and poems the Earl of Oxford wrote? The "real facts" had to be hushed up  
because a Tudor prince could never be seen to stoop to the lowly business 
of  playwriting. 

Emmerich's film is one more sign that conspiracy  theories about the 
authorship of Shakespeare's plays have gone mainstream. While  dozens of 
alternative candidates have been proposed, the Earl of Oxford is the  one whose 
supporters have been most vocal and visible. 

Leading actors,  including Mark Rylance, Derek Jacobi, Michael York and 
Jeremy Irons, have  publicly come out against Shakespeare as Shakespeare. 
National Public Radio's  Renée Montagne recently accepted an award for her 
series 
on "Morning Edition"  calling Shakespeare's authorship into doubt. At the 
New York Times, William  Niederkorn has written a series of pieces 
questioning Shakespeare's authorship.  Elise Broach's "Shakespeare's Secret," a 
popular young-adult novel, has recycled  the story of Elizabeth's clandestine 
relationship with the Earl of Oxford for  the middle-school crowd. 

And as the Wall Street Journal reported last  year, the Supreme Court 
boasts some of the most prominent Oxfordians in the  land. Retired Justice 
Sandra 
Day O'Connor has signed a "declaration of doubt"  about Shakespeare's 
authorship. Justice Antonin Scalia has publicly acknowledged  his belief that 
the 
Earl of Oxford wrote the plays. So has Justice John Paul  Stevens, who has 
been declared "Oxfordian of the Year." 

A  quarter-century ago all this was unimaginable. In fact, Stevens, along 
with  fellow Justices Harry Blackmun and William Brennan, ruled unanimously 
in favor  of Shakespeare and against the Earl of Oxford in a celebrated moot 
court in  1987. The objection to Oxford's authorship was obvious: Because he 
died in 1604,  he could not have written, sometimes in active collaboration 
with other  dramatists, 10 or so plays after that (including "Henry VIII," 
described by  contemporaries as "new" when staged in 1613). 

What then accounts for the  reversal? The facts haven't changed; what has 
is our comfort level with  conspiracy theory as well as our eagerness to seek 
authors' lives in their  works. 

In a literary culture swamped by memoirs, many now take it for  granted 
that most writing -- of the past no less than the present -- is  confessional 
or at least experiential, and that you had to live it to describe  it. (The 
Elizabethans would have found such notions bizarre.) By that logic, the  Earl 
of Oxford, who in reality was captured by pirates and had three daughters,  
has a stronger claim to have written "Hamlet" and "King Lear" than a  
professional playwright from Stratford who never set sail and only had two  
daughters. 

Since no external documents link the Earl of Oxford to the  plays (in 
contrast to Shakespeare himself, for whom there is plenty of  contemporary 
linking evidence), those convinced that he wrote them are stuck  arguing, in 
circular fashion, that circumstantial evidence is to be found in the  works, 
and 
that these works are necessarily autobiographical, a portrait of an  
aristocratic author's life, loves and thwarted political ambitions.  

"Anonymous" capitalizes on the desire for a more exciting story than one  
in which a young man from the provinces moves to the big city and fashions 
out  of old stories and a powerful imagination great plays and poems. And the  
democratization of knowledge on the Internet, a breeding ground for 
conspiracy  theories, has been a boon for those who believe that Shakespeare 
didn't 
write  the plays. It certainly hasn't helped that literary scholars have 
mostly dodged  this fight, even as they've lost their cultural authority. 

All this  would have come as a shock to Looney, whose advocacy of the Earl 
of Oxford was  spurred by a hatred of democracy and modernity, and who in 
making his case for  Oxford was also promoting the view that we needed to 
return to a social order in  which everyone knew his and her place and the few 
ruled over the many.  

In cashing in on this fantasy, Emmerich's film may lead moviegoers to  
believe that only a nobleman had the necessary gifts to write the works of  
Shakespeare. Sure, it's only a movie, but try explaining that to schoolteachers 
 
who will soon be confronted by students arguing that the received histories 
of  Elizabethan England and its greatest poet are lies -- and that their 
teachers,  in suppressing the truth, are party to this conspiracy. 

Emmerich's film  will also do a deeper disservice to Shakespeare's legacy. 
Encouraging audiences  to believe that the plays are little more than the 
recycled story of a  disgruntled aristocrat's life and times devalues the very 
thing that makes  Shakespeare so remarkable: his imagination.

James Shapiro is a professor  of English at Columbia University and the 
author of "Contested Will: Who Wrote  Shakespeare?" (Simon & Schuster).
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