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Shakespeare's Sister (song)

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Wikipedia article




"'Shakespeare's Sister'" is a song by the English rock band the Smiths. Released in March 1985, it reached No. 26 in the UK Singles Chart. It is also featured on the compilation albums 'Louder Than Bombs' and 'The World Won't Listen'. The front cover to the single features former 'Coronation Street' star Pat Phoenix, dressed up as her character Elsie Tanner.

Background



The title refers to a section of Virginia Woolf's feminist essay 'A Room of One's Own' in which she argues that if William Shakespeare had had a sister of equal genius, as a woman she would not have had the opportunity to make use of it. Sean O'Hagan says that the essay was "one of the many feminist texts Morrissey embraced as a sexually confused, politically-awakened adolescent".

According to Simon Goddard, the lyrics also draw on Elizabeth Smart's novella 'By Grand Central Station I Sat Down and Wept' and the Billy Fury song "Don't Jump". The song's narrative has been compared to 'The Glass Menagerie' by Tennessee Williams, in which the character of Laura Wingfield is referred to as "Shakespeare's sister" by the character Jim O'Connor because the latter refers to Laura's brother Tom, an aspiring writer, as "Shakespeare."

Track listing



Artwork and matrix message



The original single's sleeve cover featured Pat Phoenix, best known for her long-running role as Elsie Tanner in the British soap opera 'Coronation Street'.

The British 7" and 12" vinyls contained the matrix message: HOME IS WHERE THE ART IS/none

The Netherlands versions contained the message: HOLLAND CUTTING/none. "Holland cutting" was an etching on the Dutch version of the album 'Meat Is Murder'.

Charts



Reception



In a retrospective review of the song, Jack Rabid of 'Allmusic' wrote, "The Smiths' weakest is still quite good, is what we can infer from this. What wit Morrissey still shows, record after record? Who else is writing an opening line like 'Young bones groan/And the rocks below say/Throw your skinny body down, son!' thus evoking the tragic Romeo and Juliet quality of so much teenage romance in the most poetic terms?"

Writer Jon Savage described it as "essentially a suicide drama set to a demented rock'n'roll rhythm".

Influence



The band Shakespears Sister took their name from the song.

References



Category:Songs with feminist themes

Category:Songs about William Shakespeare

Category:The Smiths songs

Category:1985 singles

Category:Songs written by Morrissey

Category:Songs written by Johnny Marr

Category:1985 songs

Category:Rough Trade Records singles

Category:UK Independent Singles Chart number-one singles

Category:Rockabilly songs

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