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Much Ado About Cooking

That Shakespeare Life

Release Date: 01/26/2026

How to Insult Someone Like Shakespeare show art How to Insult Someone Like Shakespeare

That Shakespeare Life

Zounds! Your Bunched Back toad! In Shakespeare’s plays we find a hoard of truly fabulous one liners, zingers, and impressive insults that frequent the lips of our favorite characters.  When they were written in the 16th century, some of the words we find most hilarious today were actually bordering on a line between legal and illegal, and even sometimes blasphemous, which in a Protestant England wracked by religious tensions and wars, was often worse than merely illegal.  Here today to take us back to turn of the 17th century England and explore some of the words that could land...

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Painting Your Lips, Bleaching Your Skin, and Other Cosmetic Treatments for Renaissance Women show art Painting Your Lips, Bleaching Your Skin, and Other Cosmetic Treatments for Renaissance Women

That Shakespeare Life

In Romeo and Juliet, Juliet declares “Thou know'st the mask of night is on my face, Else would a maiden blush bepaint my cheek” Katharina in Taming of the SHrew talks about painting your face, and Timon of Athens makes a connection between painting and your face saying “wear them, betray with them: whore still; Paint till a horse may mire upon your face, A pox of wrinkles!” And of course, Hamlet has the most famous facial disguise quote when he says “God has given you one face but you make yourself another.” All of these references underpin what we know...

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Evil May Day and Sir Thomas More show art Evil May Day and Sir Thomas More

That Shakespeare Life

Immigration, labor tensions, and social unrest were pressing realities in Shakespeare’s England—and few events capture that strain more vividly than the 1517 uprising known as Evil May Day. In this week’s episode, historian Shannon McSheffrey joins us to unpack the economic frustrations, guild restrictions, and growing immigrant communities that fueled this riot in Tudor London. From the role of the city’s “liberties” to the political response of Henry VIII and the event’s lasting legacy in chronicles and drama like Sir Thomas More, we explore how this moment of unrest shaped the...

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Homelessness and Vagrancy in Shakespeare's England show art Homelessness and Vagrancy in Shakespeare's England

That Shakespeare Life

For the 16th century, a vagrant was someone who operated outside of societal norms, someone who moved around without a fixed home, or produced a profit without the oversight of a noble patron. In a culture that highly prized both hierarchy and organization, someone who fell outside these categories was cast under severe scrutiny, seen as a potential threat, and faced harsh punishments specifically aimed at preventing vagrancy. During Shakespeare’s lifetime, new laws were being passed to aggressively define and control the vagrant, casting a net that often saw players and playwrights like...

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Starlings in Shakespeare's England show art Starlings in Shakespeare's England

That Shakespeare Life

In Shakespeare’s Henry IV, Part 1, Hotspur delivers a chilling threat against King Richard:  “I’ll have a starling shall be taught to speak  Nothing but ‘Mortimer,’ and give it him  To keep his anger still in motion.”  It’s a line rooted in the politics of kingship and rebellion—but it also hinges on something strikingly practical. The idea of teaching a starling to speak wasn’t poetic fancy. It was entirely possible. In fact, it was happening in Shakespeare’s lifetime.  This week, we’re stepping beyond the metaphor to explore the real bird behind...

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Seige of Famagusta and Shakespeare's Othello show art Seige of Famagusta and Shakespeare's Othello

That Shakespeare Life

In Shakespeare’s Othello, the Second Senator in Act One warns of a Turkish fleet bearing down on Cyprus. Later in that same scene, the Duke of Venice remarks, “The Turk with a most mighty preparation makes for Cyprus. Othello, the fortitude of the place is best known to you.” References to Cyprus appear again and again throughout the dialogue—calling attention to wars, naval battles, and the conflicts surrounding the island, including, as Iago puts it, the struggle between “grounds Christian and heathen.” Shakespeare places Othello in Cyprus at a moment of extreme tension. In the...

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Courts, Rackets, Balls, and Rules: The Game of Tennis in the 16th Century show art Courts, Rackets, Balls, and Rules: The Game of Tennis in the 16th Century

That Shakespeare Life

In Shakespeare’s plays, we see 6 total references to tennis. Polonius mentions an argument over a tennis game in Hamlet. Henry V and Pericles talk about tennis courts and there’s even a couple of references to “tennis balls” showing up in Shakespeare’s other plays, talking about them being played with at the game of tennis, as well as being stuffed as part of the process of making a tennis ball. We can tell that Shakespeare and his contemporaries knew about the game of tennis, but where did it come from? How was it played? Do we know anything about these tennis courts they used? To...

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Easter in Shakespeare’s England: Faith, Feasting, and a New Doublet show art Easter in Shakespeare’s England: Faith, Feasting, and a New Doublet

That Shakespeare Life

Shakespeare’s only reference to Easter comes up in Romeo and Juliet Act III when Mercutio talks about buying a new doublet for Easter. Despite only a single reference to this holiday, for the people of 16-17th century England, Easter was a major event. Holidays in Shakespeare’s lifetime largely followed the life of Jesus Christ, and the resurrection of Jesus that is celebrated on Easter Sunday was a high point of the year’s festivities. Here today to share with us the customs, foods, and yes, the clothing like a new doublet, that would have been staples for the observance...

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Monkeys and Apes in Shakespeare's England show art Monkeys and Apes in Shakespeare's England

That Shakespeare Life

In this episode of That Shakespeare Life, we explore the surprising presence of monkeys, apes, and baboons in early modern England and the role these animals played in the culture of Shakespeare’s world. Shakespeare refers to primates dozens of times in his plays, and those references were not purely imaginative—exotic animals were arriving in England through global trade, kept as fashionable pets by elites, and even trained to perform tricks for public entertainment. By examining travel narratives, natural history books like Edward Topsell’s The History of Four-Footed Beasts, and...

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Children’s Toys and Games in Tudor England: show art Children’s Toys and Games in Tudor England:

That Shakespeare Life

What toys did children play with in Shakespeare’s lifetime? In this episode, historian Dr. Julia Martins joins That Shakespeare Life to explore the games, dolls, rattles, hobby horses, and playground activities that shaped childhood in Tudor England—and how these playful details appear in Shakespeare’s world.      

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More Episodes

From delectable marchpane in Romeo and Juliet, and the herbs of the Merchant of Venice to stew’d prunes of Henry IV, and carving capons in Love’s Labour’s Lost, there is a wide gambit of meals consumed in Shakespeare’s plays that span from bawdy feasts to elite noble banquets, and even popular meals eaten as much to control your behavior as they were seen as nourishment. The details about food found throughout Shakespeare’s plays reflect the real foods enjoyed from the peasants to the royalty of Shakespeare’s life.  

This week we are diving into these delectable delights with food historian and author Sam Bilton, to talk about her latest book, Much Ado About Cooking—which was created in collaboration with Shakespeare’s Globe---that allows us to get a literal taste of Shakespeare. Much Ado About Cooking takes Shakespeare’s own food references and pairs them with real recipes from his lifetime, then reimagines those recipes for the modern cook so that you can easily make, and eat, food from the life of William Shakespeare.