Stanley Wells and Gary Taylor, eds.
Stanley Wells argues that he 'must have been an amiable, long-suffering man, well accustomed to tolerating jokes about his appearance'.
Paul Edmondson and Stanley Wells comment that "her star waned when she was discovered to have been fair".
Stanley Wells, for example, has written that any scenes involving more than, at most, four characters, "betray an uncertainty of technique suggestive of inexperience."
Additionally, Stanley Wells argues that the scenes involving more than four characters, "betray an uncertainty of technique suggestive of inexperience."
Despite Quince's obvious shortcomings as a writer, Stanley Wells argues that he partly resembles Shakespeare himself.
Michael Dobson and Stanley Wells state that Shakespeare's authorship "cannot be regarded as certain".
He has "a deep imaginative engagement with the text," Stanley Wells said in these pages in 1994.
Stanley Wells reviews After Shakespeare: an Anthology ed by John Gross.
Kristina Isabelle and Stanley Wells stretched up like icicles in a cave and parted after the music ended.