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3. A Fair Youth

A world of vice and entertainment - the Bard makes his name in London and meets a muse for his sonnets. Read by Toby Stephens.

Arriving in London in the 1580s, Shakespeare moved to Bankside where whorehouses sat beside theatres.

New works were needed. Shakespeare would have seen Tamburlaine by his contemporary, the university educated Christopher Marlowe.

Then audiences flocked to see Shakespeare's own Henry VI plays. By the time his main literary rivals were dead, Richard III and his comedies were staged. And could the 'young and fantastical' Earl of Southampton have inspired Shakespeare's finest love sonnets?

A reconstruction of the life, work and era of William Shakespeare.

Written by Stephen Greenblatt and abridged by Miranda Davies

Read by Toby Stephens

Excerpts read by:

Alice Hart
John Rowe

Producer: Emma Harding

First broadcast on Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4 in October 2004.

27 days left to listen

15 minutes

Last on

Thursday 03:30

Broadcasts

  • Wed 24 Jun 2009 14:15
  • Thu 25 Jun 2009 04:15
  • Wed 4 Aug 2010 15:15
  • Wed 1 Jun 2011 15:45
  • Wed 17 Apr 2013 14:45
  • Wednesday 08:30
  • Wednesday 13:30
  • Wednesday 19:30
  • Thursday 03:30