No, he did not. The Globe Theatre was a building. Nobody could join it. All you could do was act in it. And in any case it did not exist in 1594; it was built five years later.
What Shakespeare joined in 1594 (sort of, since he was actually a founding partner) was the acting company called the Lord Chamberlain's Men. This group of actors performed in all kinds of different theatres including the Curtain and the Theatre and, at a later date, the Globe Theatre.
Yes, he must have done. Shakespeare was a regular actor with the company that was headquartered at the Globe for about fourteen years. It would be incredible if he did not act at their main theatre in that time.
Shakespeare helped found one of the best acting companies in London. It started out as Lord Hunsdon's Men, changed its name to the Lord Chamberlain's Men when Hunsdon received that title, and became the King's Men when James I became their patron. The company was formed because several theater companies had folded after 1592 when all of the playhouses were closed because of plague for more than a year. Lord Hunsdon's Men tried to bring together the best actors and playwrights from the other companies. Only the Lord Admiral's Men remaind intact from before 1594, and it too absorbed members from the failed companies. By 1600, however, London supported five or six active theater companies, again.
You could not "join" the Globe Theatre because it was a building. You cannot join the Taj Mahal or the Empire State Building either. Shakespeare's acting company was the Lord Chamberlain's Men (later called the King's Men after they changed patrons). Shakespeare and other members of the company owned the Globe Theatre. They did not join it.
Shakespeare was one of the founding members of the Lord Chamberlain's Men in 1594. There appears to have been a restructuring after the theaters were closed due to plague in 1592 and 1593. The company moved into the Globe in 1599 and became the King's Men in 1603.
Shakespeare was a founding member of the Lord Chamberlain's Men in 1594, not 1595.
no he did not he only write plays he do not act
Formed in 1594, the company was The Lord Chamberlain's Men. In 1603, it became The King's Men.
From 1594 to his retirement from the world of the theatre, Shakespeare worked with the same theatre company, first called the Lord Chamberlain's Men and later the King's Men. The leader of the company was Richard Burbage.
The Lord Chamberlain's Men, the company to which Shakespeare belonged, was formed in 1594. Shakespeare was very much a junior partner, but the major partners very possibly saw economic advantage in having an actor who was also a promising playwright in the company.
Shakespeare wrote his plays for theatre companies who would put them on and pay him for them. After he became a partner in a theatre company in 1594 he wrote all of his plays specifically for his own company to perform.
The Lord Chamberlain's Men was formed in 1594 and Shakespeare was one of its charter members, so he didn't actually join it. He had by that time already written a few plays and was an actor. Later, under King James I, the Lord Chamberlain's men changed their name to the King's Men. This company did not own the Globe Theatre or any theatre; that was a different group of partners, one of whom was also Shakespeare.
Shakespeare was a founding member of the Lord Chamberlain's Men in 1594, not 1596.
Shakespeare co-founded the Lord Chamberlain's Men in 1594.
William Shakespeare acted in his own plays in four theatres: the Theatre, Curtain, Globe and Blackfriars. He may also have appeared in his own plays before 1594 with whatever company he was with, but we do not know which company or which theatre.
Formed in 1594, the company was The Lord Chamberlain's Men. In 1603, it became The King's Men.
There is speculation that Shakespeare acted for Pembroke's Men or Strange's Men, but there is not hard evidence of it. In 1594 he helped found the Lord Chamberlain's Men.
From 1594 to his retirement from the world of the theatre, Shakespeare worked with the same theatre company, first called the Lord Chamberlain's Men and later the King's Men. The leader of the company was Richard Burbage.
The Lord Chamberlain's Men, the company to which Shakespeare belonged, was formed in 1594. Shakespeare was very much a junior partner, but the major partners very possibly saw economic advantage in having an actor who was also a promising playwright in the company.
Shakespeare wrote his plays for theatre companies who would put them on and pay him for them. After he became a partner in a theatre company in 1594 he wrote all of his plays specifically for his own company to perform.
The Lord Chamberlain's Men was formed in 1594 and Shakespeare was one of its charter members, so he didn't actually join it. He had by that time already written a few plays and was an actor. Later, under King James I, the Lord Chamberlain's men changed their name to the King's Men. This company did not own the Globe Theatre or any theatre; that was a different group of partners, one of whom was also Shakespeare.
Shakespeare helped form the Lord Chamberlain's Men in 1594. The occupied the Theatre and the Curtain playhouses until 1599 when they dismantled the Theatre and rebuilt it in another location, changing the name to the Globe.
The Chamberlain's Men
The Lord Chamberlain's Men was an acting company formed in 1594. William Shakespeare was one of its charter members. Most of its partners had previously been partners in other acting companies, particularly Lord Strange's Men, which had gone broke due to the long theatre closures in 1593-4. Apparently this was not true of Shakespeare; as far as we can tell this was the first time he was a partner in an acting company.