

History's greatest playwright had a mother who deserves her own spotlight—finally.
Michael Wood tells the extraordinary story of an ordinary woman in a time of revolution. Born during the reign of Henry VIII, Mary Arden is the daughter of a Warwickshire farmer, but she marries into a new life in the rising Tudor middle class in Stratford-upon-Avon. There she has eight children, three of whom die young. Her husband becomes mayor, but is bankrupted by his shady business dealings. Faced with financial ruin, religious persecution and power politics, the family is the glue that keeps them together until they are rescued by Mary's successful eldest son - William Shakespeare!
Writing
Michael Wood makes 500-year-old tax records genuinely gripping.
Production
Gorgeous Warwickshire locations that Shakespeare actually knew.

Director
Peter Harvey
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Mary Arden was actually a wealthy heiress—her family owned more land than John's, flipping the 'marrying up' narrative. The Arden name connected to old Warwickshire aristocracy, giving William his social ambitions.
The documentary quietly argues that Shakespeare's obsession with fallen fathers and resilient mothers—Hamlet, Lear, Coriolanus—directly mirrors watching Mary save the family while John collapsed. The 'secret life' was hiding in plain sight in the plays.
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