Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Hopeful Allusions to Juliet and Romeo and Cleopatra and Caesar in The Dick Van Dyke Show

“Romance, Roses and Rye Bread.” By Garry Marshall and Jerry Belson. Perf. Dick Van Dyke, Rose Marie, Morey Amsterdam, and Sid Melton. Dir. Jerry Paris. The Dick Van Dyke Show. Season 4, episode 6. CBS. 28 October 1964. DVD. Allied Vaughn, 2023.
In this episode, we have another crush story. Bert Monker, Deli Owner, has a serious thing for Sally Rogers, though he's been disguising it under a cover of comedy.

But things are brought to a head when he gives Sally a rose anonymously, causing speculation about a secret admirer.  

He also gives her a ticket to a play, cleverly keeping the other ticket in the pair so that he can surprise her at the theatre without actually having to ask her out on a date. Note: Bardfilm does not recommend this.

But it's the Shakespeare that interests us here at Bardfilm. Here's a clip that includes a scene from the beginning and a small segment from later in the plot—after Sally has gone home under the pretext of a headache so she won't have to see Bert:


Bert refers to his gift of the rose as "a little token of love for the Cleopatra [pronounced as Jimmy Durante would have] of Comedy from the Caesar of Sandwiches . . . to the Juliet of Jokes from the Romeo of Rye." 

The Romeo and Juliet connection is clear. But Cleopatra and Caesar? Is Bert showing an inaccurate knowledge of Shakespeare's couples? Or is he thinking of Cleopatra's love for Julius Caesar (which predates her love for Anthony and was between a younger woman and an older man)? Or is he thinking of the possibility of a relationship between Cleopatra and Octavius Caesar after Anthony dies in Shakespeare's play? Or is he not thinking of Shakespeare at all but remembering the 1963 film Cleopatra with Elizabeth Taylor? Later in the episode, he leaves the play early—perhaps he also failed to make it through the entire 1963 film (which runs an astonishing five hours and twenty minutes).

From other references in The Dick Van Dyke Show, we know the writers associate Anthony with Cleopatra, so we can deduce that it's not a slip on the writers' part. Perhaps it's simply the alliteration—"Anthony of Sandwiches" doesn't have the same ring as "Caesar of Sandwiches."

Later, Bert leaves the Caesar to the side, calling up a version of the balcony scene where Romeo brings Juliet soup.

The other point of interest (though not specifically of Shakespearean interest) is the avant-garde play. In the plot, Sally gives Rob the ticket, and he gives it to Laura. When she shows up, Bert is perplexed, and it leads to some humorous moments. The play itself is titled Waiting for an Armadillo—which must be a sly reference to Waiting for Godot. Although Waiting for an Armadillo has nothing to do with Shakespeare (Waiting for a Fretful Porpentine would have been a dead giveaway), I can't resist showing that scene:


Alas, there's no Shakespeare there that I can detect, but I find this attitude toward the off-off-Broadway play interesting. It will be a few years before we get Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead, but it's a decade after Waiting for Godot. And the great Allan Sherman will release his "It's a Most Unusual Play" (a parody of the song "It's a Most Unusual Day") in 1965. 

In tracking down the date of that song, I stumbled upon a performance of the song on The Dean Martin Show in 1966. I know we're going further and further from Shakespeare (except for the line "Everybody wants to know / Where we found this handsome Romeo" in the dance number preceding the song), but here's that performance:


This mockery of avant-garde theatre seems to be part of the mid-1960s zeitgeist. Plays like Waiting for an Armadillo certainly had everyone talking—and, I think, rather nervous!

As a final note, I see that some of the lyrics from the song on Sherman's 1965 album My Name Is Allan: Allan Sherman Sings Great Movie Hits & Songs From The Cutting Room Floor have been changed for this performance. Compare these original lyrics with those sung in the performance above:

Original:

It's a play where something went wrong
’Cause it's five hours twelve minutes wrong.
If you sit there, my friend, from beginning to end,
Then your bladder better be strong.

Dean Martin Show Performance:

It's a play where something went wrong
’Cause it's five hours twelve minutes wrong.
If you sit there, my friend, from beginning to end,
Then your backbone better be strong.

Original:

There are people hitting people.
There's a couple in a cage.
There's neurotics, there's narcotics,
And the bathroom is right on the stage.

Dean Martin Show Performance:

There are people hitting people.
There's a couple in a cage.
There's neurotics, there's psychotics,
And the bathroom is right on the stage.

Next time, we'll try to stick to the Shakespeare. See you then!

Links: The Episode at IMDB.

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Monday, June 22, 2026

Allusions to Two Female Romantic Leads for the Price of One in The Dick Van Dyke Show

“The Lady and the Baby Sitter.” By Bill Persky and Sam Denoff. Perf. Dick Van Dyke and Mary Tyler Moore. Dir. Jerry Paris. The Dick Van Dyke Show. Season 4, episode 3. CBS. 7 October 1964. DVD. Allied Vaughn, 2023.
Early in Season Four, The Dick Van Dyke Show puts the names of two of Shakespeare's most well-known heroines into the love letter of a high school student.

Roger, the student, babysits for the Petries, and he develops a crush on Laura. Rob, not knowing the identity of Roger's beloved, advises him to speak his mind.

The letter is the end result of that advice. Rob expects it to be a rough draft for which he'll provide editorial assistance; it turns out it's the final draft and it has reached its intended recipient:


Among the icons of desirability, we find 50% from Shakespeare: Cleopatra and Juliet.

There's not much more than that as an emblem—Rob does not take on any Leontes- or Othello-like jealousy—but it's still Shakespeare!

Links: The Episode at IMDB.

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Friday, June 19, 2026

The Quality of Mercy in The Dick Van Dyke Show

“Dear Mrs. Petrie, Your Husband is in Jail.” By Jerry Belson and Garry Marshall. Perf. Dick Van Dyke, Herkie Styles, and Jackie Joseph. Dir. Jerry Paris.
The Dick Van Dyke Show. Season 3, episode 29. CBS. 15 April 1964. DVD. Allied Vaughn, 2023.

Here, The Dick Van Dyke Show draws from a new Shakespeare play, putting Romeo and Juliet and Hamlet on the shelf for the time being.

The plot sends Rob Petrie off to catch an old friend's act at what I can only assume is an off-off-off-Broadway theatre. Once there, he gets drawn into the increasing chaos backstage. The performers are wandering in and out while an illegal game of craps is underway.

The title gives away the end—Rob ends up in jail. But, before he's arrested, he's approached by a performer who wants another chance to audition for The Alan Brady Show. And her big audition piece seems to be Portia's "The quality of mercy" speech from The Merchant of Venice—semi-sung to something of a dance number.

Here's the scene:


It's an odd direction to go, but I do appreciate the variety!

Links: The Episode at IMDB.

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Thursday, June 11, 2026

An Intimation and Implication from Romeo and Juliet in The Dick Van Dyke Show

“The Life and Love of Joe Coogan.” By Carl Reiner. Perf. Dick Van Dyke and Michael Forest. Dir. Jerry Paris. The Dick Van Dyke Show. Season 3, episode 17. CBS. 22 January 1964. DVD. Allied Vaughn, 2023.

In this episode, the Shakespeare is very subtle. In one line, we get an intimation of a famous line from Romeo and Juliet: "What's in a name? That which we call a rose / By any other [name] would smell as sweet" (II.ii.43–44). Joe Coogan's line here alludes to that line: "Maybe Shakespeare was wrong—maybe there is something in a name."

Joe's speech lets us know that the implied reader / implied viewer of a Dick Van Dyke Show episode would have enough familiarity with Juliet's speech to make the leap from "What we call things doesn't matter—it's the essence of the thing itself that we value" to "Actually, maybe if enough people value specific instances of something called by a general name, we will start to value the thing because of the name." The intimation of Shakespeare's line gives us a number of implications about its application.

Here's the scene:


We arrive at the point of realizing that there are a lot of adorable Lauras in the world—and then we find that we're not talking about Lauras in general or even about two distinct Lauras. It's the specific Laura who married Rob Petrie who's under consideration.

That immediately makes Rob become jealous and perceive Joe as a potential threat. Once Rob leaves, we learn that Joe is a priest (evidently a Roman Catholic priest) and is no threat at all.

I admire the subtle use of Shakespeare here and the way it takes us on intellectual wings of thought as it questions the unquestionable!

Note: If you want to get down in the weeds, it's the 1597 Q1 of Romeo and Juliet that has "name" as the operative word. Q2 (1599) has "word," as does the First Folio of 1623. But whether you're familiar with "a rose by any other name would smell as sweet" or "a rose by any other word would smell as sweet," the meaning is the same. After all, what's in a word?

Links: The Episode at IMDB.

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Friday, May 29, 2026

A Casual Allusion to One of Gertrude's Speeches in The Dick Van Dyke Show

“My Husband is the Best One.” By Martin Ragaway. Perf. Dick Van Dyke, Rose Marie, Morey Amsterdam, and Carl Reiner. Dir. Jerry Paris. The Dick Van Dyke Show. Season 3, episode 15. CBS. 8 January 1964. DVD. Allied Vaughn, 2023.

After a brief trip to Twelfth Night, The Dick Van Dyke Show returns to Hamlet, the old standby for brief allusions to Shakespeare.

In this episode, Rob Petrie gives an interview—and the resulting article states unequivocally that Rob is the true genius behind The Alan Brady Show.

The letter is published—but with an additional note from the editor. In this clip. Rob is asked to read that to the other key players in the show:


You may have spotted the "doth protest too much" lifted from Gertrude's comment about the play-within-the-play. It's shorthand for "Well, yes, but there's something more going on here."

Again, I'm intrigued by the casual way it's worked in. The presumption is that the viewer will recognize the phrase's origins. Stanley Fish would, I suppose, have a lot to say about the way that reveals "The Implied Reader" (or Implied Viewer in this case).

Note: This episode represents a transitional stage in the portrayal of the character of Alan Brady. The original idea was never to have Alan Brady appear at all; this then became a resolve never to show Brady's face when he did appear in a scene. Later, he appears just as all the other actors do. At this point in the run, they are still making half-hearted attempts to avoid showing Alan's face. That explains the awkwardness of the blocking in the scene above.

Next up, a subtler use of Shakespeare!

Links: The Episode at IMDB.

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Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Double Twelfth Night Quotes in The Dick Van Dyke Show

“Big Max Calvada.” By Bill Persky and Sam Denoff. Perf. Dick Van Dyke, Rose Marie, Morey Amsterdam, Sheldon Leonard, and Arthur Batanides. Dir. Jerry Paris. The Dick Van Dyke Show. Season 3, episode 9. CBS. 20 November 1963. DVD. Allied Vaughn, 2023.

And now . . . back to our series.

In this third-season episode of The Dick Van Dyke Show, Rob, Sally, and Buddy are pressured by Big Max Calvada, the local gangster, to write for his talentless nephew. 

This clip gives you the threatening approach and the reluctant (but resolute) agreement by the writers.

And then it gives you not one but two quotes from Twelfth Night:


The first is what Sebastian says to Antonio in gratitude for his help and his friendship. The extended version in the Riverside Shakespeare is

I can no other answer make but thanks,
And thanks; and ever [thanks; and] oft good turns
Are shuffled off with the uncurrent pay;
But were my worth as is my conscience firm,
You should find better dealing. (III.iii.14–18)

Note: I'm suppling the [thanks; and] to the Riverside. There's no note about this (as there would be if it were an editorial choice), and there's no quarto of the play that might give this alternate reading. Have I stumbled upon a rare typo in the Riverside?

The second (slightly-misquoted and certainly misattributed) quote is from the letter Malvolio finds in Act II. Here's how the Riverside Shakespeare puts it:
Some are [born] great, some [achieve] greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon ’em. (II.v.145–46)
Note: Here, the editorial brackets are the Riverside's. The note attributes [born] to Rowe—F1 has "become"; [achieve] is found in F2—F1 has "atcheeues." Gesundheit.

The pin of the scene is the attribution to "Al Capone." It's a mildly-amusing way to point back to the gangster's threats.

As a final note, you may recognize the henchman from "That Which Survives," a third-season episode of Star Trek: The Original Series. As the crew's geologist he lasts two short scenes—just until the mysterious woman says, "I am for you, Lieutenant D'Amato." Then he plays a corpse for a little bit. 

Links: The Episode at IMDB.

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Monday, May 11, 2026

A Shakespeare Plot Works its Way into an Episode of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine

“The Muse.” By Majel Barrett and René Echevarria. Perf. René Auberjonois and Majel Barrett. Dir. David Livingston. Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. Season 4, episode 20. Syndicated television. 29 April 1996. DVD. Paramount Pictures Home Entertainment, 2021.

Because the podcast Star Trek: The Next Conversation has reached this point in its trek (ha!) through Deep Space Nine, we need to take a break from cataloguing all the Shakespeare in The Dick Van Dyke Show to consider a little more Shakespeare in Star Trek.

Although I'm not a fan of any of the Lwaxana Troi episodes, they do sometimes have Shakespearean connections (for which, q.v.). I was pleased to find that the tradition continues in Deep Space Nine.

This episode's A-plot is pretty awful. Lwaxana is in the B-plot, and that only thing that makes it any better is the possible Shakespearean influence. Let me give you the opening; keep your eye out for the Shakespeare plot that it's emulating: 


Is everyone with me? It's a clear retelling of one of the key conflicts in A Midsummer Night's Dream!

To be fair, I'll acknowledge that it's very subtle. But the argument between Oberon and Titania in Shakespeare's play hinges on who should be in charge of raising the child of a votaress of Titania's who died in childbirth. Since the child is male, Oberon considers it time for him and the male side of the fairy world to take over his upbringing; Titania, with her deep connection to the votaress, disagrees. And that's what we have mirrored here.

I'm not sure I'll go as far as to say that Odo is a Puck analogue (since he's more in league with Lwaxana (our Titania), he's more like Moth or Mustardseed, I suppose), but there's something very Dreamlike in the setup.

Actually, as the plot moves forward (Caution: Spoilers ahead), the only solution is for Odo to convince the husband that he (Odo) is in love with Lwaxana. Perhaps Odo is Bottom the Weaver!

In any case, it's not an episode I'd recommend—except for the conceivable (ha!) Shakespearean connection.

Links: The Episode at IMDB.

For more connections between Star Trek and Shakespeare, head to Shakespeare and Star Trek Complete.

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Monday, April 13, 2026

The Dick Van Dyke Show Provides a Quote that Hamlet Never Said

“Will You Two Be My Wife?” By Carl Reiner. Perf. Dick Van Dyke, Mary Tyler Moore, Rose Marie, and Morey Amsterdam. Dir. John Rich. The Dick Van Dyke Show. Season 2, episode 17. CBS. 16 January 1963. DVD. Allied Vaughn, 2023.

Yes, it seems like I'm becoming a completist when it comes to Shakespeare in The Dick Van Dyke Show, but I promise that I'm including only those references to Shakespeare about which I have something to say. You'll notice I didn't mention the time Buddy said, "Well, that concludes our little series of Shakespearean plays" in "The Sleeping Brother" (Season 1, episode 27). But when the Shakespeare is a bit less incidental than that, I say, "Bring it on."

Allow me to set the stage for this moment. Sally and Buddy, Rob's fellow writers, have discovered what appears to be a memoir relating how Rob and Laura got engaged and went on a honeymoon. Rob, serving in the Army at the time, has only one three-day pass, and he needs to decide whether he should use it to take a honeymoon with Laura or to go back to his hometown to break it to a woman with whom he has if not an engagement at least an understanding.

It's an opportunity for the show to give us a flashback episode. This clip takes us from reading the memoir back to the events the memoir presents:


Rob Petrie's narration is intriguing:
And, as Hamlet once said, "Hark! Here comes Dorothy, and I wish I was dead."
It's not the words Hamlet is purported to have said that's interesting; it's the easy introduction to the quote that fascinates. It flows so trippingly off the tongue that it seems like a cliché—the kind of thing people are saying all the time, whether seriously or in fun. It's a filler phrase—a marker of a transition into other matters. Shakespeare is so pervasive in the culture that one of his characters can easily, unquestioningly serve this function. Indeed, I could see that becoming a running gag.

Let's see where we go next.

Links: The Episode at IMDB.

Click below to purchase the entire run of the show from amazon.com
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Friday, April 10, 2026

A Bit of the Balcony Scene in The Dick Van Dyke Show

“The Foul Weather Girl.” By Carl Reiner. Perf. Dick Van Dyke, Mary Tyler Moore, and Joan O'Brien. Dir. John Rich. The Dick Van Dyke Show. Season 2, episode 16. CBS. 9 January 1963. DVD. Allied Vaughn, 2023.

In our journey through The Dick Van Dyke Show, we now come to a brief exchange drawn directly from Romeo and Juliet, Act II, scene ii: The Balcony Scene.

An old high school friend of Rob's has come to the Petrie household to see if Rob will help her make it in entertainment in New York City.

Rob's a nice guy, so he agrees to arrange an audition for her on the show he helps write—The Alan Brady Show.

As she starts leaving, she and Rob reminisce about having played the eponymous roles in Romeo and Juliet in high school. That brings on the quote:


Unfortunately, it also brings on the jealousy. Did no one teach these people back in high school that jealousy is the green-eyed monster that doth mock the meat it feeds on?

The Shakespeare in this episode is more incidental than deeply integrated. Indeed, I'm more interested in the meta-theatrical moment where Rob says that Laura is behaving just like "one of those wives in a situation comedy." That's a very Shakespearean thing to do, quote or no quote.

Links: The Episode at IMDB.

Click below to purchase the entire run of the show from amazon.com
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Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Mixed Shakespeare in The Dick Van Dyke Show

“Somebody Has to Play Cleopatra.” By Frank Tarloff. Perf. Dick Van Dyke and Mary Tyler Moore. Dir. John Rich. 
The Dick Van Dyke Show. Season 2, episode 14. CBS. 26 December 1962. DVD. Allied Vaughn, 2023.
It's looks like we've started a "Shakespeare in the Dick Van Dyke show" category here on Bardfilm, so let's keep going with it.

The episode "Somebody Has to Play Cleopatra" alludes to (but fails to quote directly from) Antony and Cleopatra, Romeo and Juliet, and Hamlet.

The plot involves an amateur variety show that is being put on as a fundraiser for the PTA. Most of the episode is a flashback to the previous year's production and Rob Petrie's anxiety that he'll be chosen to direct the upcoming show—and how difficult it was for him to direct last year's.

During rehearsals, we are presented with Laura Petrie's big number: A mock-calypso (calypso appropriation?) number written by Moray Amsterdam and titled "True, Mon, True." 


First, we have to acknowledge the phony Caribbean accent. It's not fair to dismiss it as insignificant or harmless, but my own inclination is to see it as a misguided homage to Harry Belafonte. With that in the foreground, we can take a look at the lyrics. This is my attempt (it doesn't seem to have made its way into any of the large internet-based lyric collections): 
"True, Mon, True"

Cleopatra was gal so beautiful,
And she had certain spark.
All famous men she swayed
When love's game she played.
Beauty never paid,
So Cleo made her Mark . . . Antony! 

Everybody! 

True, mon, true—that is the actual fact.
True, mon, true—that is the actual fact.

Romeo and Juliet, when they say, "Let's wed," 
They choose balcony scene.
Today, same thing you see
In the balcony
Of each movie show,
Guess you know what I mean. . . . Ask any usher!

In my suburbia housewife-urbia,
I’m busy as a bee's:
I drive the kids to school,
Dig a swimming pool,
Work just like a fool.
Husband—what a help he's!
He play the golf. . . . And I’m teed off!

Note: There's no need to [sic] "bee's" and "he's" in that last verse. They are semi-awkward contractions, not attempted possessives or mis-apostrophized plurals. 

Before we get to the commentary on the song, I'll relay an additional verse presented by this Facebook page:

Now you've all heard of the Lady Godiva
And horseback ride that she took.
Although she wore no clothes
From her head to toes,
Through the streets she goes,
And no man took a look . . . at her horse!
The song gives us its unique take on two famous pairs of lovers in Shakespeare in the first two verses. The first cleverly subverts our expectations about what appears to be the common noun "mark"—and then turns out to be the proper noun "Mark"—the first part of Mark Antony's name. The second is (perhaps) a bit racier, playing on the supposition that teenagers on dates in the 1960s also use balconies to declare their love for each other—but with the implication that that's where the make-out sessions are happening. The first is there because it connects to the main story; the second is just a bonus.

The main section of the plot has to do with rehearsing a mocked-up scene from Antony and Cleopatra. As far as I can tell, it doesn't correspond with any specific scene in Shakespeare's play—and it certainly doesn't quote from the play:


All of that was in flashback. When we return to the present-day question of Rob's determination to refuse the role of director for the current PTA fundraiser. And that's where we get one more Shakespeare reference:


That woman is clever. The thought of a first-time author and composer attempting a musical version of Hamlet with an entirely amateur cast does make the skeptical eyebrow raise, doesn't it?

Links: The Episode at IMDB.

Click below to purchase the entire run of the show from amazon.com
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Friday, April 3, 2026

The Long-Awaited Direct (More or Less) Quotation from Shakespeare in The Dick Van Dyke Show

“What's in a Middle Name?” By Carl Reiner. Perf. Dick Van Dyke, Mary Tyler Moore, and Rose Marie. Dir. John Rich. 
The Dick Van Dyke Show. Season 2, episode 7. CBS. 7 November 1962. DVD. Allied Vaughn, 2023.
Since I started paying serious attention to The Dick Van Dyke Show, I've found mention of a grade school production of Hamlet, a general Shakespeare joke, and a summary of Romeo and Juliet. And I predicted that it wouldn't be long before the show provided an actual Shakespeare quote.

In this episode, Laura Petrie (Mary Tylor Moore's character) has recently learned that she's pregnant. Sally Rogers (Rose Marie's character) suspects something and has to engage in desultory conversation because Laura is not being forthcoming.

That's where the Shakespeare comes in:


We start off strong with a genuine Shakespeare quote—but it deteriorates (or elevates, depending on your point of view) into a joke.

And that's it. Well, except that the title of the episode also quotes / alludes to Shakespeare.

[Note: As I write this, I've already watched further forward in the series, and there's more—and more substantial—Shakespeare to come.]

But I found something else interesting in the episode—something that may provide some understanding of Shakespeare.

Here's how Laura announces her pregnancy to Rob:


I didn't grow up in the 1960s, but I thought I was pretty culturally literate about many things in the era. After all, I know who Billy Sol was! Note: That's thanks to my early obsession with Allan Sherman—go try his song "Shticks Of One And Half A Dozen Of The Other" to learn more. But I had never run across the expression "The rabbit died" to mean "I'm pregnant."

The expression comes from a kind of pregnancy test of the time. You can read about The Rabbit Test here.

To someone who had never heard that before, it seems like a very bizarre way to tell someone about a new baby on the way. There's a very deep paradox at work there—usually, no one is happy that a rabbit died (with the exception of rabbit hunters, people who are hungry for Lapin à la Moutarde, and Elmer Fudd). But Rob Petrie's reaction to the news that the rabbit died is to jump for joy. 

And that's where the Shakespearean understanding might come in. To people in the 1960s, "the rabbit died" was a perfectly normal and perfectly comprehensible expression. To me, it seems utterly strange. Likewise, there are many expressions in Shakespeare that made perfect sense to him and his contemporaries but that give readers pause. This speech of Beatrice's could serve as a case in point: "I will even take sixpence in earnest of the bear-ward, and lead his apes into hell."

The conclusion is this: As with The Dick Van Dyke Show, so with Shakespeare. It's not incomprensible; it make perfect sense to its contemporaries. We just need to do a little bit of work to understand some expressions that have fallen out of use. And, honestly, those are fewer and farther between than you might expect!

Links: The Episode at IMDB.

Click below to purchase the entire run of the show from amazon.com
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Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Book Note: Boy

Galland, Nicole. Boy
William Morrow, 2025.
It took me a long time to make it through this historical novel—even though it's set in Shakespeare’s day. If it draws the reader in, it only does so in fits and starts—not quickly or consistently.

But it's admittedly a good novel. The history is sound, the characters are interesting, and the writing is good. I (eventually) enjoyed making my way through the plot, though I did not like the romance elements (read “Harlequin Romance” there) very much. They seemed out of place—only there to give the novel some spice or to attempt to bring two genres together.

The historical setting, more specifically, is around the time of the Essex Rebellion and that famous staging of Richard II. The politics there are fairly interesting, and it's also interesting that we see them through the eyes of a player (Sander) and his precocious lover (Joan), who has disguised herself as a man (is that Shakespearean enough?) frequently throughout the novel to receive tutelage from Sir Francis Bacon.

Let me give you a sample from late in the novel. Here, Sander, who has been playing the women's roles for Shakespeare's company, seizes on an opportunity to move up in the company (since he's getting too old to play the women's roles convincingly). It is he who has been chosen to play Richard II in that infamous production:








I'm not sure it will make its way onto the syllabus of a future Modern Shakespearean Fiction course, but it tells an interesting story in an interesting way. 

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Monday, March 30, 2026

The Dick Van Dyke Show Offers a Summary of Romeo and Juliet

“The Curious Thing About Women.” By Frank Tarloff. Perf. Dick Van Dyke and Mary Tyler Moore. Dir. John Rich. 
The Dick Van Dyke Show. Season 1, episode 16. CBS. 10 January 1962. DVD. Allied Vaughn, 2023.

We've covered a small reference to Hamlet and a general Shakespeare joke in The Dick Van Dyke Show, and now we get a stronger connection to the plot of a Shakespeare play.

In this episode, Laura Petrie (Mary Tylor Moore's character) is castigated by Rob Petrie (played by Dick Van Dyke) for opening his mail and reading it.

Actually, it's more that she opens it and reads it and then summarizes its contents for him. He describes how he feels by way of an analogy:


Yes, "A couple of mixed-up teenagers run away from home and end up dead" is a pretty good thirteen-word summary of Romeo and Juliet . . . but a little something is lost along the way.

We're not yet at the point where the show is ready to quote directly from Shakespeare, but the time may come. I'll keep you updated!

Links: The Episode at IMDB.

Click below to purchase the entire run of the show from amazon.com
(and to support Bardfilm as you do so).

Friday, March 27, 2026

A Shakespeare Joke in The Dick Van Dyke Show

“Buddy, Can You Spare a Job?” By Walter Kempley. Perf. Dick Van Dyke, Mary Tyler Moore, Rose Marie, Richard Deacon, and Lennie Weinrib. Dir. James Komack. The Dick Van Dyke Show. Season 1, episode 14. CBS. 26 December 1961. DVD. Allied Vaughn, 2023.

In this episode of The Dick Van Dyke Show, Buddy Sorrell, one of the writers for the show-within-the-show (there's some Shakespeare right there, as a matter of fact), has arranged to be let go from The Alan Brady Show. Mel Cooley, who's the producer in charge of the writing staff, is only too happy to see the back of him. Mel is sick of Buddy's (probably mostly good-natured) insults. But (because of a series of plot complications) Buddy wants—needs, really—his job back. 

Rob and Sally, the remaining writers, decide that the only way to get Mel to re-hire Buddy is to attempt to hire a writer who is even more insulting to Mel than Buddy ever was.

Here's how that plays out:


The idea of someone claiming—seriously or not—that they've been engaged over the past two years in translating Shakespeare into Pig Latin is priceless. And the rest of the scene is likewise a comic masterpiece.

I'll keep you updated on any further Shakespeare that I find!

Links: The Episode at IMDB.

Click below to purchase the entire run of the show from amazon.com
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Wednesday, March 11, 2026

The First Feature-Length Hamlet

Hamlet
. Dir. Hay Plumb. Perf. Sir J. Forbes-Robertson, Miss Gertrude Elliot, and the Full Drury Lane Company. 1913. On-line video [available to those in the UK on the BFI Player]. Hepworth.
Cowboy Junkies.
 "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry." The Trinity Session. Compact Disc. Latent Recordings, 1988. 

I'm still fascinated by silent Shakespeares, and I was thrilled when I found that the first feature-length silent Hamlet became available.

"Feature length," for early silent films, means approaching one hour. 

Imagine trying to convey the depth and breadth of one of Shakespeare's masterpieces in less than an hour and without any complete speeches! Such a production, which must depend on prior knowledge of the play, could easily become not much more than the CliffsNotes version of the play. I had a Shakespeare professor who was fond of talking about a five-minute silent film version of Hamlet. He used the anecdote to illustrate what Horatio's account of the events of the play must have been like:
                                   So shall you hear
Of carnal, bloody, and unnatural acts,
Of accidental judgments, casual slaughters,
Of deaths put on my cunning and [forc'd] cause,
And in this upshot, purposes mistook
Fall'n on th' inventors' heads: all this can I
Truly deliver. (V.ii.380–86)
A five-minute silent Hamlet, he argued, might not even do as much as that.

The 1913 Hay Plumb Hamlet does significantly more, but, I think, only for those who have more than a passing familiarity with the play. The title cards, for example, mainly start us off with the first line or two of a scene or a soliloquy and leave the audience to run with it.

Still, even with that limitation, it's a powerful adaptation of the play. It opens with brief portrayals of Hamlet and Ophelia, each with what might be considered a representative line, and then it throws us in to the world of the play.

Taking those two brief, almost dumb-showesque scenes as my cue, I've put together a (roughly) five-minute sampling of the film. Note: The film itself is widely available on the internet, but none of the versions I've seen have supplied any soundtrack. I've rectified this with a song by the Cowboy Junkies (I happened to be listening to it while editing the clip, and it happened to be just the right length—and also to fit the melancholy mood of the play.


That should give you a sense of the film and its approach to the Hamlet / Ophelia relationship. 

I'm particularly fond of the most famous speech in Shakespeare boiled down to a one-line title card. But, in this setting at least, that's enough. 

And we learn (via title card) that "Hamlet discovers the King behind the curtain"—without any mention of Polonius. That emphasis means that we don't get a "Where's your father?" title card . . . and that we just jump straight to "Get thee to a nunnery." 

The film is worth watching in its entirety. Indeed, I'm working on ways to bring it in to my current Shakespeare and Film course!

Links: The Film at IMDB. The Film on the BFI Player (for those in the UK).

Bonus Image: The Best-Known Title Card from the Play:



Bardfilm is normally written as one word, though it can also be found under a search for "Bard Film Blog." Bardfilm is a Shakespeare blog (admittedly, one of many Shakespeare blogs), and it is dedicated to commentary on films (Shakespeare movies, The Shakespeare Movie, Shakespeare on television, Shakespeare at the cinema), plays, and other matter related to Shakespeare (allusions to Shakespeare in pop culture, quotes from Shakespeare in popular culture, quotations that come from Shakespeare, et cetera).

Unless otherwise indicated, quotations from Shakespeare's works are from the following edition:
Shakespeare, William. The Riverside Shakespeare. 2nd ed. Gen. ed. G. Blakemore Evans. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1997.
All material original to this blog is copyrighted: Copyright 2008-2039 (and into perpetuity thereafter) by Keith Jones.

The very instant that I saw you did / My heart fly to your service; there resides, / To make me slave to it; and, for your sake, / Am I this patient [b]log-man.

—The Tempest