Will: What Is He Good For?

Season 4, Episode 3: From Scattered to Sorted(?)

25 min · 11 de feb de 2026
Portada del episodio Season 4, Episode 3: From Scattered to Sorted(?)

Descripción

After the chaos of the 1619 “False Folio,” Shakespeare’s friends John Heminges and Henry Condell decided enough was enough. If anyone was going to collect Will’s plays properly, it would be the men who’d spent over twenty years in the trenches with him. In this episode, we trace their likely first steps, from digging through the King’s Men’s prompt books and cue scripts to tracking down the “good” quartos of Hamlet and Romeo and Juliet. Along the way: bootlegs, brand management in the 1590s, and the thorny business of negotiating publishing rights in a world without copyright as we know it. They pulled off the unthinkable and gathered the plays. But collecting them was only half the battle.

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episode Season 4, Episode 1: The End of the Road artwork

Season 4, Episode 1: The End of the Road

By 1609, William Shakespeare had been writing plays for nearly two decades. He was a household name in London, his company—now the King’s Men—enjoyed royal patronage, and their new indoor stage at Blackfriars promised a fresh era of theatrical success. By all accounts, Shakespeare was still at the height of his career. But behind the curtain, things were shifting. The endless grind of plague closures had slowed his output. His family life was changing—his daughter Susanna married, his mother passed, his first grandchild was born. And in his plays, we see something else: a tone that grows more experimental, more reflective, even more personal than before. Fathers soften. Endings grow stranger. And Shakespeare himself seems to be stepping back, handing the reins to younger playwrights, and perhaps preparing for retirement. In this episode, we explore the final stretch of Shakespeare’s career: from the collaborative experiments of Timon of Athens and Pericles, to the intimate revelations of the Sonnets, and finally, to his last solo masterpiece, The Tempest—a play that reads like his farewell to the stage. We’ll also meet the rising talent John Fletcher, soon to become Shakespeare’s partner in his last works, and learn how the fire that consumed the Globe in 1613 symbolized the end of an era. And then, silence. By 1616, Shakespeare is gone. But his words are not. The question is: how would those words survive? And who would ensure they reached us?

5 de nov de 202531 min
episode Season 4, Teaser: Will: What Is He Good For? - The First Folio artwork

Season 4, Teaser: Will: What Is He Good For? - The First Folio

Shakespeare’s death in 1616 could have meant the loss of his words forever. Many of his plays existed only in fragile manuscripts and cheap, error-filled quartos. Then, seven years later, two of his fellow actors—John Heminges and Henry Condell—took on the monumental task of preserving their friend’s work. Their project became the First Folio of 1623: the first collected edition of Shakespeare’s plays. Without it, we would have no Macbeth, no Twelfth Night, no The Tempest. With it, Shakespeare’s reputation leapt from playwright of his time to literary giant for all time. Season 4 of Will: What Is He Good For? uncovers the story of the First Folio: how it was assembled, why it mattered, and how one book turned Shakespeare into a legend whose words continue to shape our world four centuries later.

29 de sep de 20252 min