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William Shakespeare Statue
Central Park

This full-standing portrait of celebrated playwright and poet William Shakespeare (1564-1616) was made by John Quincy Adams Ward (1830-1910) and unveiled here on Literary Walk on May 23, 1872.

William Shakespeare was born in Stratford-on-Avon in April 1564. His father, John Shakespeare, was a glove-maker and commodities trader who rose to become a prominent local alderman and bailiff before suffering declining fortunes. His mother, Mary Arden, was the daughter of a substantial landowner. Little is known of Shakespeare's upbringing; he was locally schooled, likely at the King Edward IV Grammar School in Stratford, acquired a reasonable knowledge of Latin and Greek, and read the Roman dramatists.

In 1582, he married Anne Hathaway, and they had a daughter, Susanna, and twins Judith and Hamnet, who died in boyhood. The first account of his professional accomplishments appears in 1592, when rival playwright Robert Greene, in his book A Groatsworth of Wit, referred to the rising actor and dramatist as "an upstart crow, beautified with our feathers¡K" In 1594, Shakespeare was a charter member of a theatrical company known as the Chamberlain's Men (as of 1603, the King's Men) who performed mainly at the Globe Theater in London. He held a one-tenth interest in the Globe, and it was there that many of his plays were performed before the theater burned in 1613 during a production of his Henry VIII; Shakespeare retired to Stratford around this time.

Shakespeare was enormously prolific; in his relatively short career he authored 13 comedies, 13 historical dramas, 6 tragedies, 4 tragic comedies and 154 sonnets. Many of his plays have become classics of the stage, and his poems are revered for their mastery of language and verse. He is the most widely known author of English letters.

In 1864, coinciding with the tricentennial of Shakespeare's birth, a group of actors and theatrical managers, among them noted Shakepearean actor Edwin Booth (1833-1893), received permission from Central Park's Board of Commissioners to lay the cornerstone for a statue at the south end of the Mall between two elms. Nothing further was done until the end of the Civil War, and through a competition in 1866, Ward was selected as the sculptor. Later referred to as the "Dean of American Sculptors," he contributed nine sculptures to the parks of New York; among them Roscoe Conkling (1893), Alexander Holley (1888), William Earl Dodge (1885), Horace Greeley (1890), Henry Ward Beecher (1891), The Indian Hunter (1869), The Pilgrim (1885), and the Seventh Regiment Memorial (1874). The last three can be found in Central Park.

The committee raised funds through several benefits, including a performance of Julius Caesar. Jacob Wrey Mould (1825-1886) - chief architect for parks at the time, and responsible for much of the ornament and architecture in Central Park - designed the elaborate pedestal for this statue. Ward combined a classical pose with many details of Elizabethan dress, and he relied on numerous images of Shakespeare, especially a bust in Stratford. The sculpture was cast in Philadelphia in 1870, and due to delays in procuring and cutting the granite pedestal in Scotland, was unveiled on a temporary base in 1872; some commentators found the work a noble effigy, and others derided it statue as a costume piece.

In 1986, a replica was made by Tallix Foundry for the State Theater in Montgomery, Alabama, which hosts an annual Shakespeare Festival. In exchange, Montgomery benefactor William M. Blount established a maintenance endowment for the original here in Central Park, and in 1995, the Central Park Conservancy conserved the sculpture.

Central Park has other Shakespearean associations. In 1890, Eugene Schieffelin released 80 starlings into the park, because they were mentioned in Shakespeare's plays (there are now over 200 million of them in America). In 1915, the Shakespeare Society assumed maintenance of a rock garden, built in 1912, in the park near West 79th Street. In 1934, the Shakespeare Garden, which features species named in his works, was relocated to the hillside between Belvedere Castle and the Swedish Cottage, and in 1989, a new landscape design by Bruce Kelly and David Varnell was implemented. In 1958, after two seasons at the East River Amphitheater, Joseph Papp's Shakespeare Festival moved to Central Park; the Delacorte Theater, its permanent home, opened in 1962.

 

Monday, Feb 12, 2007