No. He was a co-owner.
the globe theatre
He didnt own it but the famous Shakespeare playhouse is the globe theatre
Shakespeare became owner of a 12.5% share in the Globe Theatre in 1599. His share in the theatre decreased over the years.He became the owner of a share (of 12.5 %) in the Globe Theatre. Obviously other people owned the other 87.5% of the theatre.
10%10
One-eighth.
the globe theatre
He didnt own it but the famous Shakespeare playhouse is the globe theatre
Shakespeare became owner of a 12.5% share in the Globe Theatre in 1599. His share in the theatre decreased over the years.He became the owner of a share (of 12.5 %) in the Globe Theatre. Obviously other people owned the other 87.5% of the theatre.
One-eighth.
10%10
No. However the modern replica Globe Theatre is called Shakespeare's Globe Theatre.
Two theatres: the Globe and the Blackfriars.
Trick question. Shakespere is not real.
The Globe Theater (theatre) was a theater in London associated with Shakespeare.
The Globe Theatre is the theatre most often associated with Shakespeare. However, it was not his theatre in the sense that your car is your car. He did not own it although he did have a financial interest in it. It was not the only theatre he had a financial interest in. It is far from the only theatre he acted in; he acted in many others. It was not the only place Shakespeare's plays were seen (although they were performed there) and they played lots of plays by people other than Shakespeare there. Finally, none of his contemporaries would ever have thought of the Globe as "Shakespeare's theatre"; almost certainly it would be "the Burbages' theatre."
The Globe Theatre was a theatre in London associated with William Shakespeare. It was built in 1599 by Shakespeare's playing company, the Lord Chamberlain's Men, and was destroyed by fire on 29 June 1613. A second Globe Theatre was built on the same site by June 1614 and closed in 1642. But neither of those theatres is Shakespeare's Globe Theatre. Shakespeare's Globe Theatre was built in 1997 on a site very close to the site of the original Globe, which it imitates in many respects.
The Globe theatre was in England, as Shakespeare lived in England.