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Dateline: 25th September, 2007
Putting Shakespeare on the (Tube) Map Designer Kit Grover, who has been working with the Royal Shakespeare Company on designs for a new range of RSC products has collaborated with Doctor Hester Lees-Jeffries from St Catherines College, Cambridge on a project to produce Greater Shakespeare, a design inspired by the London Underground Tube map.
Instead of mapping out London destinations, it maps out the relationships of Shakespeares characters across all his plays.
The idea came to Kit when he was having dinner with Hester. He asked her if there was any substance to the idea that Shakespeares characters developed and migrated across plays as he developed his work, that, for example, a character in one play was reincarnated as another in a different play, retaining core traits but maybe older or finding themselves in a tragedy rather than a comedy. She thought this was worth pursuing and made up a mad and fabulous chart to show how she thought the characters interlinked.
Kit tried every kind of chart and family tree to capture the energy of Hesters original. When his thoughts turned to the iconic design of a tube map with its lines, junctions and intersections, the ideas fell into place. With more collaboration from Hester and the RSC enterprise department Kit found what he thought was just the right balance.
The lines include lovers (red), mothers (pink), fathers and daughters (green), villains (light blue), heroes (dark blue), strong and difficult women (turquoise), warriors (black) and fools (orange). Interesting intersections include Henry V who meets on the warrior and hero line, and Lady Macbeth on the strong and difficult women and warrior line.
The design has been used on various items which are being sold in the RSC shop in the Courtyard Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon and online. They include mugs, tea-towels, t-shirts and a cotton bag.
Please note that all three Archive indices are very long and will therefore take some time to download.
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