Entertainment
Celebrating the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare’s First Folio | Books | Entertainment

William Shakespeare’s First Folio (Image: Getty)
To be, or not to be… the most famous writer of all time. When it comes to William Shakespeare, that is not the question. The love that endures for England’s national poet, the son of a humble glove maker from the West Midlands, really does, in his own words, “put a girdle round the Earth”.
You need only witness the coach loads of fans from all over the UK, Europe, America and Asia descending upon Stratford-upon-Avon – The Bard’s birthplace and home of the Royal Shakespeare Company – to realise that people from every part of the world, even those who don’t speak English, are still enthralled by Shakespeare and his plays.
And yet, were it not for the actions of a couple of friends 400 years ago, many of his greatest works, including Antony and Cleopatra, Julius Caesar, Macbeth, The Taming of The Shrew and The Tempest, might have been lost forever.
During Shakespeare’s life, his individual plays were published only as quartos – flimsy pieces of printed paper folded into quarter-sized pamphlets and sold for sixpence.
Considered throwaway items at the time, they were not designed to last and, when Shakespeare died in 1616, there was a real likelihood the quartos, as well as the plays printed on them, would disappear forever.
Luckily, in 1623, seven years after his death, two of his colleagues and fellow actors, John Heminge and Henry Condell, decided to preserve their friend’s legacy by publishing a compendium of his works in one single and substantial 900-page volume. Eighteen of the plays are believed never to have been printed previously.
Entitled Mr William Shakespeare’s Comedies, Histories & Tragedies, 750 copies were printed which sold for between 15 and 20 shillings. Now known as The First Folio, only 235 copies survive, each worth millions.
The highest amount ever paid for one at auction was in October 2020, when an American collector, Stephan Loewentheil, spent $9.97m (£7.84m) at Christie’s auction house in New York.
The lion’s share of the 235 Folios are in libraries, colleges or private collections in the United States. More than a third – 82 to be precise – are looked after by the Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, DC.
The rest are spread across the globe – several in Japan, and the odd copy in Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, India and Chile.
Luckily for us, around 50, though, still remain here in the UK. In celebration of the First Folio’s 400th anniversary this year, many of these are on public view around the country, in Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre and the British Library in London, for example, as well as Stratford-upon-Avon where the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust maintains three copies, including one belonging to the RSC.
Greg Doran is artistic director emeritus at the RSC and has been described as “one of the great Shakespeareans of his generation”. He has directed the likes of Judi Dench, Helen Mirren and David Tennant in Shakespeare roles – even King Charles III himself, who, in 2016, as the then Prince of Wales (not Denmark!), played Hamlet in Doran’s Shakespeare Live! production for the BBC.
The King and Queen host a reception for Shakespeare’s works (Image: Getty)
On his global travels, Doran has had the opportunity to inspect several of the remaining First Folios, which he has written about in his new book My Shakespeare: A Director’s Journey through the First Folio. He told the Express about some of the volumes and their owners he’d met, and in particular one lifelong Shakespeare fan, King Charles III, whose predecessors have been the subject of some of The Bard’s work: “I saw a copy at Windsor Castle which the King showed me,” he says.
“It’s a Folio owned by Charles I which he was reading at Carisbrooke Castle, where he was held captive, on the Isle of Wight, just before his execution. And I wondered: which play was he taking consolation from?
“Was he perhaps reading something pertinent like Richard II? He also ended up in prison before being killed, and famously says: ‘I wasted time and now doth time waste me’. But no, it seems that, actually, he was reading the comedies…which I suppose you would do, if you were in that position, to try and cheer yourself up!”
Doran explains how our current King was a loyal president of the RSC for over 30 years. “I’ve known of his passion for Shakespeare from the way he regularly comes to performances,” he says. “There’s always something that strikes him about the play that is unique to him and his position.
“For example, he noted that his predecessor Charles I had annotated his copy of the First Folio with his motto Dum spiro spero, which means: ‘While I breathe, I hope’.”
William Shakespeare’s Henry V at Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre (Image: Getty)
The King confessed to Doran that he is also fond of making notes in the margins. “Whenever he comes to Stratford and wants to record a particular line from a play, he scribbles it down in his own Complete Works of Shakespeare which he was given for his 21st birthday.”
But not, Doran hastens to add, on the First Folio itself, thankfully.
The RSC director also inspected Folios in Germany, USA, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand and Japan. “There’s also a copy in a university in Tokyo that belonged to a man called Paul Francis Webster, who was the only African American to own a copy,” he adds. “It turns out, he was the lyricist for the theme song for Spiderman. He also won an Oscar, in 1954, for a song in Calamity Jane.
“And that same copy which he owned had belonged, before, to the man who wrote the words to Handel’s Messiah, in 1741. It’s extraordinary that two lyricists, two centuries apart, should own that same copy.”
As well as the stories they contain, the remaining Folios give an insight into the lives of the owners who read them all those centuries ago. Professor Emma Smith teaches Shakespeare Studies at Hertford College, Oxford, and is author of The Making of Shakespeare’s First Folio.
She told the Express about some of the annotations she discovered in original volumes during her research: “There are many differences in the lives these 400-year-old books have had,” she says. “Some of them have doodles and marginalia in the sides; some of them have cat paw prints on them.”
In Oxford there’s one Folio that once belonged to a serious Shakespeare scholar in the 18th century called Edmond Malone, with a wine glass stain on it.
Smith adds: “It’s actually on Henry IV, Part 1, which is very appropriate because that’s a play all about taverns and indulgent living.”
Smith notes how the provenance and previous ownership of the Folios can be intriguing for modern scholars. “A hundred years ago, we would only have been interested in the most absolute perfect copies which look as though nobody has touched them,” she says. “Now we’re much more interested in the ways that people have left their mark upon this book: the names of the owners that people have written in them and the notes they have made.”
The cleanliness-obsessed Victorians even went so far as to bleach the pages of their Folios in order to eradicate the marginalia and doodles they considered untidy and undesirable; in complete contrast to the way historians approach their research today.
Shakespeare’s works continue to have relevance over four centuries after they were written, not just to scholars, actors and directors, but to everyday speakers of the English language. The plays are still widely performed globally. He is by far the most quoted writer in the history the English-speaking world, and is believed to have introduced or popularised over 1,700 words and phrases still in use today: ‘World is my oyster’, ‘Blinking idiot’, ‘Cruel to be kind’, ‘Wild goose chase’, ‘Clothes make the man’, ‘It’s Greek to me’, ‘All that glitters is not gold’.
A sign of his global popularity is that, over the centuries, his works have been translated into 80 or so different languages, including – rather bizarrely – the fictitious Klingon language from sci-fi series Star Trek.
If Shakespeare were alive today, he would no doubt be flattered… if a little baffled.
- The exhibition 400 Years of the First Folio is at Stratford-upon-Avon until November 5. Shakespeare.org.uk. The RSC’s production of Maggie O’Farrell’s Hamnet, London’s Garrick Theatre, from September 30. rsc.org.uk
Entertainment
Clint Eastwood’s daughter confesses ‘it was tough’ acting opposite her father | Films | Entertainment

Back in 2018, Clint Eastwood starred in the updated true story of a World War II veteran who became a drug courier for the Cartel in the 1980s.
For The Mule, the Hollywood legend had his own child, Alison Eastwood, play his daughter Iris, although she found it hard due to the nature of the role.
In a previous interview, she was asked: “Your father ended up directing you. What was that like?”
She replied: “Oh, he directed me multiple times *laughs*. I worked with him as a kid, and then I worked with him as a young adult. I last worked with him in 2018, which is when I retired from acting.
“It felt appropriate to start my acting career with him and then end it with him as well. They were all great experiences, but different ones. But he always looked after me.”
Alison told Fox News: “In 2018, I played his daughter in The Mule. It wasn’t a big role, but I played a character that didn’t speak to her father. They had a very strained relationship, which is the complete opposite of what we have. It was tough to play someone who had such negativity and resentment towards him. So when we were done shooting, I would go have a beer with him or something, so we could end the day completely happy and laughing. He’s an amazing director and there’s a reason why people love working with him.”
Before her parents divorced in 1984, Alison had really enjoyed being brought up around nature in the Eastwood home. Clint and Maggie Johnson wanted to get the family out of Hollywood and raised their kids in Carmel.
Alison remembered: “I’m glad they did because it was a very magical upbringing. We lived surrounded by the forest where we had baby deer, raccoons – all sorts of wildlife. And we were right on the ocean. My brother and I would just go outside and enjoy nature. I think that’s why I love animals and nature so much because I grew up in that kind of environment. It’s hard not to appreciate it on a very deep level.”
Alison shared how much of an influence her upbringing had on her: “It had an amazing impact on me. I remember my mom and dad took in a baby deer that had been orphaned. The mother had been hit by a car. We were able to care for it. And we were always surrounded by animals. My parents were both very conscious about exposing us to nature. But unfortunately, my dad is allergic to cats and some dogs. So is my brother Kyle *laughs*. So I ended up taking care of the animals and I just loved it. My earliest memories of my childhood were helping these animals in need and it was wonderful. I also had lots of pets – birds, fish, a hermit crab – anything that wasn’t an allergen *laughs*. I was just very fortunate to be surrounded by nature and this beautiful sea life.”
The Mule is now streaming on Amazon Prime.
Entertainment
I’m thinking of ditching my Apple Watch for new watch that specialises in retro games | Gaming | Entertainment

I’m thinking of replacing my Apple Watch with a new wearable device that’s launching in June. Atari has just announced a new smart watch that comes with an array of classic 2600 games like Missile Command and Pong. A retro gaming fan’s dream, the Atari 2600 My Play Watch is available to pre-order from the Atari website ahead of its June 10 release date. The Atari 2600 smart watch costs just $79.99 (£62 at the time of writing), which is a lot cheaper than the Apple Watch, and a big reason why I’m so tempted to invest.
READ MORE: Atari 2600+ REVIEW – A fabulous flashback to gaming’s golden age
The Atari device also comes with two interchangeable bands, complete with reversible designs. One of the straps replicates the look of the Atari 2600 console, another takes inspiration from Centipede, while my favourite has a Super Breakout theme. A third watch strap featuring a Missile Command design is also available while stocks last.
Elsewhere, the crown and button have been designed to look like classic Atari controller buttons. The rotating crown is of particular importance, serving as a paddle controller.
This brings me to the main reason why I’m thinking of ditching my Apple Watch in favour of the 2600 My Play Watch: the games.
The Atari device comes with four all-time gaming classics, including Pong, Missile Command, Centipede and Super Breakout. Centipede is my personal favourite, followed closely by Missile Command. Pong is one of the titles that put gaming on the map, while Super Breakout is as playable now as it was back in the late 1970s.
Outside of gaming, the Atari 2600 My Play Watch comes with basic fitness functions to just about justify the smart watch tag.
The Atari wearable monitors heart rate, steps, and calories burned. It’s also IP68-rated for complete dust protection and water resistance beyond 1 meter.
Unlike the Apple Watch and other more premium smart watches, the Atari device doesn’t come with Wi-Fi or Bluetooth functionality.
This means no email, WhatsApp or text message notifications, and you won’t be able to use it to control your music, answer calls and send messages.
This is undoubtedly the biggest drawback, and why Apple probably doesn’t have too much to worry about from Atari’s latest entry in the wearable space.
However, if like me you’re a sucker for old-school video games and love Atari, then you can pre-order the Atari 2600 My Play Watch from the Atari website.
(It looks like it will ship worldwide, although Daily Express has contacted Atari for confirmation, and about potential availability beyond the Atari website.)
Entertainment
Atomfall early access release time, date and how to get free PSN credit with a Deluxe copy | Gaming | Entertainment

Just a couple of months after the launch of Sniper Elite Resistance, UK studio Rebellion is back with another big new release for PlayStation, Xbox and PC.
Atomfall is a new narrative-driven survival game set in the English countryside. The Standard Edition of the game has a March 27 release date on PS4, PS5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X|S and PC (via Epic and Steam). However, customers who pre-order the Deluxe Edition can actually begin their adventure three days early.
The Atomfall early access period has a March 24 release date and a 2pm GMT release time for fans living in the UK.
The Atomfall Deluxe Edition comes with a few additional in-game bonuses, including basic and enhanced supply bundles to make the early stages a little more manageable. That’s on top of an unreleased Story Expansion, titled The Wicked Isle.
While the Deluxe Edition has a £74.99 price tag on consoles, PlayStation customers can actually nab some free store credit by visiting CD Keys.
At the time of writing, the online retailer is selling £80 PlayStation Store cards for just £74.99. This means you can get the Atomfall Deluxe Edition and have an additional £5 of PSN credit to put towards another game.
After purchasing a top-up card from CD Keys, the retailer will send you a link with the code that can redeemed on the PlayStation Store.
Once you’ve added the credit to your PlayStation account, you can pick up Atomfall Deluxe Edition, or use it to purchase another game.
If you’re playing on Xbox, then it’s worth noting that the Atomfall Standard Edition is launching as a day-one release on Game Pass Ultimate on March 27.
Inspired by the likes of Fallout, Wicker Man and The Quatermass Experiment, Atomfall takes place five years after the Windscale nuclear disaster in Northern England.
Your character wakes up in a bunker with no memory of how they got there and no idea how to escape. Players will need to explore the surrounding countryside for information, following leads and bargaining with other survivors for vital supplies.
Rebellion explains more: “A fictional reimagining of a real-world event, Atomfall draws from science fiction, folk horror, and Cold War influences to create a world that is eerily familiar yet completely alien.
“The picturesque British countryside, with rolling green hills, lush valleys, and rural villages belie the dangers that await you. Navigate cult-controlled ruins, natural caves, nuclear bunkers and more as you explore this dense, foreboding world.”
- Bangladesh3 weeks ago
DHS Autos Introduces Deepal S07 and L07 Electric Vehicles in Bangladesh
- Fashion3 weeks ago
Sign up to our Royal Style newsletter for the world of royal fashion | Royal | News
- Sports4 weeks ago
Dan Ashworth lands new job after Man Utd exit as he works freelance | Football | Sport
- Top Stories4 weeks ago
“Even Monkeys Don’t…”: Wasim Akram Lambasts Pakistan’s Act Against India In Champions Trophy
- Entertainment4 weeks ago
Phil Collins says he’s ‘very sick’ and ‘can’t hold drumsticks properly’ | Celebrity News | Showbiz & TV
- Video2 weeks ago
'एक मुस्लिम 13 साल की लड़की से शादी कर सकता है' | Mahakumbh | IITian Baba Abhay Singh
- Top Stories4 weeks ago
Imran Khan Blamed For Pakistan’s Downfall After Champions Trophy 2025 Exit By Najam Sethi
- Sports4 weeks ago
Man Utd ‘sick of Sir Alex Ferguson pressure’ as INEOS accused of burying club | Football | Sport