What Shakespeare Play Should I Read? An Infographic
Happy birthday, William Shakespeare! In his honor, try our helpful infographic to find out what celebrated play you should read next.
Where did you end up—comedy, history, or tragedy?

Where did you end up—comedy, history, or tragedy?
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Done most of the rest as Film/TV stuff
Infographic is super, btw :)

As much as I do love reading, seeing Shakespeare's plays performed isn't just "a good start" -- it's the *best* way to experience them. (Well... maybe second-best, behind actually performing them!). These are plays, after all -- Shakespeare wrote them for a stage and voices and bodies, not to mention that most crucial of elements: an audience. See them if you can; you're missing out on the real delight if you don't. This is a great and quite well-thought-out flow-chart, though!
I ended up with 'Two Gentlemen of Verona' - tickets for which I have unfortunately just failed to get.











I've been attending the Folger Theatre in Washington, D.C. this past two years and marveling over the versatility of Shakespeare (Taming of the Shrew set on a Western stage?!?! Yet, it totally worked!) I teach Hamlet and Macbeth in the classroom and they never grow old.



http://www.bard.org/plays/2013.html#....
P.S. The infographic is wonderful and well done.
Jr