Student Life
Hail Agnes full of grace: ‘Hamnet’ and the perfect mother figure
A couple of days ago, I saw an Instagram reel (in the Friends tab, no less) regarding Jessie Buckley’s recent Best Actress win at the 2026 Academy Awards. The reel was praising Buckley for the apparent embrace of her most important role as wife and mother, highlighting her talking adoringly of her months-old baby, addressing her husband and exclaiming “I want to have 20,000 more babies with you!” in her acceptance speech. The caption on the reel recalls Michelle Williams’ Best Actress acceptance speech at the Golden Globes in 2020, wherein she discussed how her abortion allowed her to advance her career, as if to say ‘look how far we’ve come!’ It is impossible not to be reminded of that meme, which has now been played for irony, depicting two clipart-style women with one holding a trophy and crying, “I won!”, while the other swaddles a baby and retorts, “No, you didn’t.” If not claiming that a successful career and familial bliss are mutually exclusive, it seems clear that within this narrative, one is being valued far over the other.
The discourse surrounding motherhood is a strange one. The cliché that the left’s weakness is its inability to reach a consensus certainly holds some truth, and the issue of reproductive rights is proof of it. For decades, feminists have oscillated between pro- and anti-natal stances, and the crackdown on access to abortion services in recent years has shifted people both ways along the axis. At the same time, the right has unfailingly tokenised the mother figure as a paragon of Biblical femininity, lamenting how she has been cheated and let down by those supposed women’s rights activists, whilst they themselves simultaneously strip her of her essential rights and prohibit her from taking on any other label. As a result of this dichotomy, depictions of motherhood in film occupy an equally strange space in the mediascape.
Buckley swept this year’s award season for her performance as Agnes in Hamnet, Chloé Zhao’s adaptation of the Maggie O’Farrell book of the same name. The film centres around Agnes (more commonly known as Anne Hathaway), a magical healer, and her romance with the then unknown town tutor William Shakespeare. The crux of the film comes when Agnes and William’s 11-year-old son, the titular Hamnet, passes away. The remainder of the runtime explores how each parent deals with the grief as it threatens to tear them apart, both from each other and their own senses of self. It seems unbelievable that even this – a historio-fictional account of Shakespeare that centres not him, but a woman in a relationship with him, which has led not to the hunky white-boy-of-the-month lead receiving accolades, but his relatively less-talked-about co-star – can be milked for ‘tradwife’ content. Yet it is not the tragedy of the plot or even Buckley’s vast success as a result of her performance (one that, by virtue of her gender, she could not have taken on in Shakespeare’s time) that people are ooh-ing and ahh-ing over.
Whether by chance or by Freudian fate, I have ended up watching every recent blockbuster concerning motherhood (of which there have been, perhaps suspiciously, quite a few) with my mum. When we watched Lady Bird (2017), which consensus dictates is Greta Gerwig’s magnum opus, I remember both of us shifting awkwardly in our seats and sniffling as we lamented our failure to understand what all the fuss was about. I managed to get through most of Everything Everywhere All at Once (2022) by myself before she wandered in right as the gorgeous final montage was playing on screen. It took her at least 15 minutes to stop pattering about her day and notice the tears streaming down my face. I hadn’t seen her in four months when we sat down to watch Hamnet together, one of the longest spans of time we’ve been apart, and I could anticipate the pain I would feel in my chest in roughly two hours before we even hit play.
On the one hand, I sympathise with the kind of cognitive dissonance showcased in that reel about Jessie Buckley. I, too, want to see my beliefs platformed by individuals with influence, and I, too, want people with the power to do so to speak out for the betterment of society. It is maybe a simple matter of chance that I’ve escaped the logical fallacy of using Buckley as a defence for wanting women to return to their rightful places in the domestic sphere, though she is anything but exemplary of that in practice. But the pathos to which these movies appeal by depicting the complicated but ultimately incomparably rewarding relationship between a mother and her child, along with Buckley’s dedication of her award to the “beautiful chaos of a mother’s heart”, makes me momentarily wonder whether it is a necessary part of my journey through womanhood to experience that dynamic on the other side of it. It makes me question whether I am a worse feminist for not wanting it.
I am my mother’s only child. She had already been in the workforce, earning a steady income for ten years before I was born. She was financially independent even before that – together, she and my father paid for their wedding by themselves, having saved up a small portion of the stipend they received as government scholars while doing their Master’s degrees here in the UK. In her career spanning three decades, she has achieved more success than most, if not all of the mothers in the films we’ve seen together. Though I am biased, I can make a strong argument for her doing a fine job at balancing her professional growth with her role as a mother. I am certainly a better person for having been raised by her, and I believe she would agree that our relationship is mutually beneficial. However, I think I would be doing her a disservice if I placed myself at the centre of all that makes her a valuable member of society.
In the final scenes of Hamnet, Agnes attends the first performance of her husband William’s new play Hamlet at the Globe Theatre. The film conjectures that Shakespeare wrote his masterpiece as a way of processing and dealing with the grief of losing his son. The credits roll to the sound of Agnes’ laughter, as she is finally able to experience catharsis and let go. Her story is as much about loss as it is about overcoming, about reconciling the complexities of your identity before and after tragedy strikes. Ultimately, a mother is not nearly all that Agnes is. I bet Jessie Buckley, a woman who has been pigeonholed rather than appreciated for her multifariousness, would agree with me.
Student Life
The Big Shot: In Conversation with Greg Brennan
For more than three decades, Greg Brennan has made a career out of being just outside the frame. As one of Britain’s longest-standing press photographers, he has captured royalty, world leaders, musicians, actors and cultural icons, from Queen Elizabeth II to Michael Jackson, Kate Moss and the Osbournes. His new book, The Big Shot, brings together over 100 photographs from that career, but it is not simply a parade of famous faces. Told in Brennan’s own words, with a narrative shaped by his son Dylan, the book reveals the patience, instinct and personal memory behind images that often lasted only a fraction of a second.
When I spoke to Brennan, it quickly became clear that The Big Shot is as much about stories as photographs: the myths that attach themselves to celebrity images, the moments that happen away from the red carpet, and the strange experience of a photographer, usually hidden behind the lens, becoming the subject himself.
For Brennan, fame itself has not changed much. After years spent photographing some of the most recognisable people in the world, he speaks about celebrity with the calmness of someone who has long since stopped being starstruck. “Fame is fame”, he says. “I think that the thing that I’ve taken most from it is that they’re just normal people, despite being famous. They’re no different from us, really”.
Still, there are exceptions. The most surreal moment of his career, he tells me, came at three in the morning, when a newspaper picture desk called to ask whether he could work that night. “I said, ‘depends on what it is, it’s 3am’, and they said, ‘Michael Jackson’s going shopping in Harrods, and they want somebody to accompany him’”. Ten minutes later, Brennan was sitting with Jackson in the empty department store, spending two and a half hours with him as he shopped in the middle of the night. “It was the most surreal thing ever”, he says. “I learned a lot about him that night. The picture that the media portrays of him isn’t who the man himself was. He was very, very different”.
That tension between public and private runs throughout The Big Shot. Brennan’s work often captures people at their most recognisable, but he seems more interested in what is behind the performance. Yet in a profession often criticised for its intrusiveness, he is careful about where he draws the line. “An intrusive photographer, for me, is one who takes pictures of people who are unaware, takes pictures sneakily”, he says. “I tend to not partake in that. You’ll notice throughout the book that everybody sees me; everybody knows I’m there”.
His approach, he says, is built on respect. He has photographed concerts, royal events, street scenes and premieres, but insists he has “never had a bad experience with anyone”. Celebrities, he points out, understand the economy of visibility: “We feed into them, they feed into us, and it’s a trade-off. But being respectful is always the best way”.
Respect, in Brennan’s case, also means context. One of the book’s purposes is to correct the stories that have grown around certain images. He shows me a photograph of Kate Moss seated on a staircase, smoking. Over the years, Brennan says, it has often been misunderstood. “I read all sorts of nonsense: that she tripped over her dress, that she fell down the stairs”, he says. “People said that she was drunk, and that it was 3am, and I scratched my head”.
The reality, he explains, was far less scandalous. The photograph was taken at 6pm, before the night had properly begun. Moss was sitting at the back exit of a theatre, smoking a cigarette, waiting for a taxi to take her to her birthday party. “I was home by 7:30”, Brennan says. “She was not drunk in this picture. So I want readers to get the truth”. The word ‘truth’ feels central to the book. Brennan understands that photographs are slippery things. They can be beautiful, iconic, even historic, while still being misread. But for him, the story behind a picture is part of the picture itself.
This becomes clearest when he shows me his portrait of Queen Elizabeth II. The image is called Stamp of Approval, and it took him twelve years. “The reason it took twelve years is because she’s not sitting with me; she’s sitting in a carriage, riding past me”, he says. “And every year we would do it, I’d get four or five frames”.
In 2015, he finally got ‘The One’. “I took four others that day, but they weren’t the same”, he says. The next morning, he printed a small copy, wrote a letter and sent it to Buckingham Palace. To his surprise, they replied. The photograph eventually entered the Royal Photographic Collection. “The Queen loved it”, he says.

It is the kind of story that transforms the image. Without it, the photograph is still striking. With it, it becomes the result of twelve years of patience. “We can look at an image, and it can be misconstrued, it can be interpreted in many different ways”, Brennan says. “But for me, as a photographer and as a photojournalist, the story is just as important as the picture”.
On the surface, The Big Shot is a book about famous people. But by speaking to Greg Brennan, I learned that it is also about the strange intimacy of photographing people the world thinks it already knows. It reveals both a photographer’s view of celebrity, and a life spent watching closely, waiting patiently, and finding the story hidden inside the frame.
The Big Shot will be released on 26 May. Greg and Dylan Brennan will be giving a talk at Blackwell’s on 27 May.
Student Life
May Morning – Cherwell
Smudged mascara and the curling of coffee steam. Small yawns and the shuffling of boots. Tangled hair plaited by the same girl from first-year, a crumbly pastry shared with her, too. Heads resting on shoulders, tired eyes looking skyward for the song that is coming. Fresh, crisp air and butter-yellow sunlight you could reach out and taste. There is excited chatter of stories from the night before, looks shared. A hush falls. May morning. See what the world can do before sunrise.
Student Life
Sunday – Cherwell
That Sunday could arrive first-class,
Wrapped in tissue and stickers with minimalist logo.
Sent anonymously (from a fan?).
It will be a crisp, sunblushed Sunday.
The first in months without rain or
Export tariff.
Sunday, with speechless morning
and an afternoon
of step-counts exceeded.
Inside, there will be boutiques browsed,
with flat whites from
an independent coffeehouse, where we know the owner.
We could unpackage this Sunday
Share it and save the tissue
For Christmas giftwrap.
We might duel over whether
we go to yours for the holiday,
Or mine, across the sea.
We might get workaday Mondays, Milky-white Tuesdays,
dreary Wednesdays, Thursdays with dinner parties,
Two-for-one Fridays, and dancey Saturdays.
It hasn’t quite left the depot
Though,
And you won’t be in to answer the door.
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