Greengross Global Arts for Brain Health Changemaker SHAKESPEARE Conversation, 23 APRIL 2026

SHAKESPEARE’S BIRTHDAY 23 APRIL WORLD INNOVATION AND CREATIVITY DAY 21 APRIL

Aim: Through the evidence of neuroscience and performance, to encourage drama training and Shakespearean workshops to override early dementia symptoms and preserve brain health.

Discover the inventive power and passion of Shakespeare, how the Bard’s revolutionary language energises the brain

On Shakespeare’s birthday, we examine his timeless insight into human nature and revolutionary use of language that has for decades mesmerised and energised actors and audiences like none other. Shakespeare is said to have invented 1,700 new words. His ‘functional shift’, transforming nouns into verbs, surprises the brain into active thought.. Recognised the world over, Shakespeare widens our vision, to look beyond our concerns, inducing a sense of awe – as our speakers demonstrate through neuroscience and performance.

Who for?

For theatre companies, drama colleges, or if you teach, study or work in the fields of applied theatre, neuroscience, psychology, psychiatry involving arts to preserve brain health, and social prescribing to enable people to access inspirational cultural and creative opportunities to preserve their brain health, identity and confidence among their new communities.

T H E C O N V E R S A T I O N (Online)

‘Shakespeare and Wellness’

H O S T:  Veronica Franklin Gould MBE, founding president of Arts for Dementia and editor of A.R.T.S. for Brain Health: Social Prescribing transforming the diagnostic narrative for Dementia: From Despair to Desire, interviews:

Dr Christopher Bailey is Co-Founding Director of the Jameel Arts and Health Lab at University College London. From 2018 to 2025, he was Arts Lead at the World Health Organisation. His Shakespeare and Wellbeing workshops and performances, Christopher explored the Bard’s references to mental, social, and physical wellbeing. He highlights how engaging with Shakespeare can foster empathy, resilience, and personal healing.

’The Bard on the Brain’ 

Professor Paul Matthews, OBE, is the Director of the Rosalind Franklin Institute, leading the national research centre in developing innovative imaging and technology for health sciences. He is Professor of Translational Neuroscience at Imperial College London, a Group Leader in the UK Dementia Research Institute and co-author of The Bard on the Brain: Understanding the Mind Through the Art of Shakespeare and the Science of Brain Imaging (2003). Paul explains the neuroscientific impact of Shakespearean insight and language on the brain    

spoken by

Dame Harriet Walter DBE, the multi-award-winning Shakespearean actress, has performed in over 20 Shakespeare plays as well as many other great world classics. She is maybe best known for her TV roles in Succession, Killing Eve and The Crown and the film Sense and Sensibility.  Her books include Other People’s ShoesBrutus and Other HeroinesFacing It and She Speaks! What Shakespeare’s Women Might Have Said (2025), Brutus and Other Heroines: Playing Shakespeare’s Roles for Women (2016), Macbeth (Actors on Shakespeare) (2002), Players of Shakespeare 3 (1994, Cambridge University Press).

P A N E L D I S C U S S I O N

Chair Professor Selina Busby,. Selina is Professor of Social and Applied Theatre at the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama, where she leads the MA Applied Theatre course. Her research and practice focus on theatre that invites the possibility of change, both in contemporary plays and in participatory performance. Selina is co-editor of Research in Drama Education: The Journal of Applied Theatre and author of Applied Theatre, A Pedagogy of Utopia(2021). She chairs the discussion with Dame Harriet Walter and Professor Paul Matthews.

‘Social Prescribing route to drama workshops for brain health’

Sian Brand, Chair of the Social Prescribing Network, explains how people can access arts programmes for brain health and other health needs, through social prescribing. With more than 15 years’ experience in local NHS commissioning grounded in public health, Siân possesses extensive expertise in the voluntary and community sector, as well as in health creation. Siân is co-author of the BSc in Health, Wellbeing & Community.

Useful Resources for Shakespeare workshops for Brain Health

Arts for health evidence

Shakespeare for brain health

Social prescribing to access Shakespeare and other arts for brain health

Training, talks, workshops