Veteran playgoers who have sat through many (perhaps too many) renditions of Shakespeare's best-known plays will often be out of phase with their neighbors in the audience. For example, during summer 1988 I did not share in the enthusiastic response to the remounted version of Bill Alexander's Twelfth Night at the Barbican or the even louder applause for Bill Cain's Victorian music-hall rendition of the same script at the Oregon Shakespearean Festival. Similarly, one of my fall semester students was ecstatic about seeing his first RSC show in Stratford-Adrian Noble's Macbeth-a show that I (and a lot of other longtime Macbeth-watchers) did not find very engaging. Accounts of such shows in scholarly journals can therefore provide a professorial grade sheet or scorecard (often with the emphasis upon errors rather than hits) but can also leave the impression of the expert having the last word (an academic version of Falstaff wounding a dead Hotspur in the thigh). Rather than providing such a ranked and annotated list of the many and varied Shakespeare productions I saw in 1988, let me offer instead a highly selective (and admittedly idiosyncratic) account of some exciting and revealing moments that range in scope from the reading of a single line to the sweep of an entire play. Perhaps such an account can pinpoint some of the rewards that make all that travel (and sitting) worthwhile.