Hi Casey -

Thanks for taking the time to describe all this. Great to hear the kids are 
alright. Also great to hear of a life lived with purpose.

There’s plenty of good cheese under the mold we’re seeing these days. Grateful 
for your reminder of that.

Carl



> On Apr 25, 2026, at 1:14 PM, Anne Smith <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Wowzers. All that in one day!!!
> 
> Sent from my iPhone
> 
>> On Apr 24, 2026, at 1:10 PM, Mary Collins <[email protected]> wrote:
>> 
>> 
>> Casey, thank you for reporting on your long and stirring Shakespearean day! 
>> Good for your students, and good for you and your family. 
>> 
>> Mary Collins
>> 646-554-3076
>> [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
>> 
>> 
>> On Fri, Apr 24, 2026 at 12:19 PM Casey Caldwell <[email protected] 
>> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>>> 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 
>>> <https://www.folger.edu/explore/shakespeares-works/shakespeares-sonnets/read/98/?q=April,%20winter#line-98.1>;
>>>  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 
>>> <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OloHiBOMPm8>, 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
>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>>> -- 
>>> Be vigitant, I beseech you!
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>> 
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> 
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