no
William Shakespeare died in 1616.
You'd have to ask Shakespeare that one, and unfortunately you can't.
yes he did because he did not like any do it for him
Shakespeare did not write any books. He wrote plays, and lots of poetry, but he never wrote any books.
William Shakespeare died in 1616. It is extremely unlikely that he will write any more plays.
More of Shakespeare's plays are based on Holinshed's Chronicles than any other work.
If he was still working on writing plays, he wasn't retired. Shakespeare did not write any plays after he retired. Henry VIII and The Two Noble Kinsmen were the last plays he wrote and he wrote them just before his retirement.
He did not write any haiku, limericks or how-to instruction books. For A+ the answer is Melodramas TAO
Shakespeare wrote or co-wrote 38 plays, not 29. We are not sure when the earliest one was written, but the first reference to any of them is in 1592. The last one was written in about 1613. The 154 sonnets were all written before 1609, when they were published. The 2 long poems Venus and Adonis and The Rape of Lucrece were written in 1593 and 1594 repectively.
We don't know exactly which play was Shakespeare's last, but in any case all of the plays have been played many many times in theatres all over the world.
Unfortunately we do not have any documentation of all of the plays presented at the Globe Theatre during its 43-year history (1599-1642). Many of Shakespeare's plays, especially those written after the Globe was built, must have been performed there as well as many by other playwrights. John Fletcher, who replaced Shakespeare as house playwright in 1613, also muct have had many plays performed there.
There was no "Shakespeare Theatre" in either 1592 or 1613. Shakespeare did not own any part of any theatre until 1599. In 1599, Shakespeare's associates Richard and Cuthbert Burbage, who did own a theatre, wanted to build a new theatre to solve some of their legal problems. They therefore arranged to use parts of their old theatre to build the new one, but they needed some cash to buy supplies. Enter Shakespeare and some other guys who put some money into the Burbages' new theatre in exchange for a cut of the profits. It was this new theatre, the Globe Theatre, which burned down on June 29, 1613 during the performance of one of Shakespeare's plays. To the people back then, the Globe would have been the "Burbage Theatre" since Richard Burbage was more famous than Shakespeare and actually owned a large chunk of it.