The 51Çà„ was fortunate enough to welcome a surprising visitor to its campus: Englandâs national poet, William Shakespeare. Alongside the opening of UCAâs Arkansas Shakespeare Theatreâs 10th anniversary season, the Baum Gallery opened its doors to host âFirst Folio! The Book that Gave Us Shakespeare.â
âThis is a great event for UCA, for Arkansas Shakespeare Theatre and also for the city of Conway,â said Conway Mayor Tab Townsell â84. âIf you were going to have a time capsule for western civilization, First Folio would be one of the things we would put in there. It helps define who we are as a civilization.â
Printed in 1623, seven years after Shakespeareâs death, the First Folio is one of the first printed and bound editions of Shakespeareâs plays. Only 800 of these treasured books were ever printed, and approximately 233 copies exist today. The Folger Shakespeare Library is home to 83 of those copies. To commemorate the 400th anniversary of Shakespeareâs death, the Folger Shakespeare Library, in partnership with the Cincinnati Museum Center and the American Library Association, toured the First Folio to all 50 states, including Washington, D.C. and Puerto Rico.
âIt is going to one city in every state, and UCA was chosen,â said Barclay McConnell, director of the Baum Gallery. âThey chose us as the site, partly because we have a facility that is of merit to host it, but I think a big part of their decision was that the Arkansas Shakespeare Theatre calls this place home. This is the perfect location for something like this: centrally located, on a beautiful campus, in a city that has really embraced Shakespeare over the past 10 years.â
UCAâs Arkansas Shakespeare Theatre celebrated its 10th anniversary season and the arrival of the First Folio, with a multitude of events that took place on campus. âWe had amazing speakers who are experts in their field talking about Shakespeare and events with the Arkansas Shakespeare Theatre Company talking about their process and work,â said Rebekah Scallet, producing artistic director of the Arkansas Shakespeare Theatre. âWe had âFamily Fridayâ every Friday where we had activities for kids to teach them about Shakespeare.â

The Arkansas Shakespeare Theatre Company chose three of Shakespeareâs most well-known and well-loved plays to perform in their 10th season. The line-up included âA Midsummer Nightâs Dream,â âTwelfth Nightâ and âRomeo & Juliet,â as well as the modern retelling of the Capulet and Montague feud as told by the Sharks and the Jets in âWest Side Story.â
The First Folio Exhibition ran from June 7 through July 12, 2016. Being the only location in the state of Arkansas to host such an iconic and important piece of history meant a lot of groundwork had to be laid years in advance.
âThis has been an extremely long process. We started it over two years ago with our application to the Folger [Shakespeare] Library,â said Scallet. âItâs so special to see this exhibit and to actually see Shakespeareâs words on the pages. Here we are with this incredible document, right here on campus. Weâre very excited that we were selected.â
Securing the First Folio was a very detailed and involved process. The Folger Shakespeare Library collected in-depth climate data from the Baum Gallery for a year to ensure UCA possessed the ideal climate to host the exhibition. In order to preserve and protect this literary relic, the UCA Physical Plant had to take many precautions.
The gallery was equipped with dehumidifiers that were emptied twice daily, and a humidity check was performed every morning.
âWe had to maintain humidity levels between 45 and 56 percent and maintain a temperature of around 70 degrees for three months,â said Michelle Ellington, director of energy and sustainability. âWe also introduced LED lamps into the Baum Gallery, so we had great lighting that didnât require UV filters. We were able to maintain the five foot-candles necessary to preserve the Folio and keep the exhibit lit.â
It took a campus-wide effort to protect this important piece of history. Without the First Folio, the world would not have 18 of Shakespeareâs most beloved plays, including âMacbeth,â âJulius Caesarâ and âAs You Like It.â
âYou have to spend time with the text to truly appreciate it,â said Nisi Sturgis â01, UCA alumna and actress in the Arkansas Shakespeare Theatre Company. âIt takes time to get to know someone, to get to know the life of a person. Shakespeareâs work is so astonishing that you can spend the rest of your life unraveling it.â










