No. Although it was one of his early plays, it does not seem to have made the impact that the Henry VI trilogy or Titus Andronicus did. Henry VI Parts One and Two were published in Shakespeare's lifetime and so was Titus, but the Two Gentlemen of Verona was not published until the Folio. Francis Meres was aware of it when he wrote his Palladis Tamia in 1598.
Shakespeare wrote mostly plays but he is also famous for his poetry. His plays cover a remarkable breadth of human experience. He even wrote about dogs. (In The Two Gentlemen of Verona)
Verona
Pick any line from Cymbeline or Pericles, or the Two Gentlemen of Verona, or Titus Andronicus, or King John or Timon of Athens. None of these plays have any lines anyone will have heard of.
He is famous for writing plays.
for writing a lot of stuff
Shakespeare, although a man, died rich and famous, and is still famous today.
For writing 154 sonnets
He is famous for Tragedy, Comedy, and Historical plays.
Poetry.
writing singing pole dancing
he got famous by writing poems and plays in the olden times!
Verona is a city in northern Italy famous for its architecture and connections to William Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet." The name Verona is of uncertain origin, but it is believed to be of pre-Roman or Celtic origin.