He saw a live theatre group and was inspired forever.
We don't know since he left no personal records. We can speculate that he was interested from the first time he saw a play whenever that was. It's just a guess though.
Shakespeare first received recognition as an actor and playwright in London.
Shakespeare is only important in literary history. He is one of the most important figures to legitimize the Modern English language as a literary language. He is also very significant in the history of the development of drama, being one of the first dramatists to write character-driven drama.
Anne Frank wrote in her diary that she was the first adolescent to become madly interested in psychology and Greek mythology.
She got interested in science when she first read the book A Wrinkle In Time about science.
Try to become her friend first and then show her your personality
That doesn't make any sense!!
In 1966.He was at the age of 27
Shakespeare wrote over thirty plays, many of which are considered among the best in the history of the theater. He wrote over a hundred and fifty sonnets, among the greatest in the English language. Many words and phrases Shakespeare coined have become household words, a phrase Shakespeare coined. His plays have been in continual revival since they were first produced. He has been translated into almost every language on the planet. He is taught in English, literature, drama, and theater classes, not only in the English-speaking world, but in the entire world. He is The Man. Shakespeare Rocks!
His first wife was in the industry which is when the 'acting bug' bit Depp.
There is no theatre called "William Shakespeare Theater", at least not as far as I can tell, so your question might be about:One of the theatres Shakespeare worked in, like the Theatre, Curtain, Globe and Blackfriars. He also performed at the Rose and Newington Butts.One of the theatres Shakespeare had shares in, like the Globe or Blackfriars. Shakespeare was not the primary owner of any theatres.The reconstructed Globe theatre which now stands in London, the official name of which is "Shakespeare's Globe Theatre".The state of drama at the time Shakespeare was working, in the same way we talk about "modern theatre", or "theatre of the absurd". The usual name for the kind of drama they had in England in Shakespeare's day was "Elizabethan drama" or "Jacobean drama".All of these have different histories with interesting facts. Did you know that Shakespeare and the company he performed with made the Curtain their main base when the landlord locked them out of the Theatre? Or that the Blackfriars theatre was constructed in the same room that a divorce hearing took place between Henry VIII and his first wife Catherine of Aragon? Or that the reconstructed Globe theatre is the first thatched building built in London since 1666? Or that the demand for plays in Shakespeare's day was very great, because there were several acting companies, and each one brought out new plays once or twice a month?
But it was. Theatre was very popular in Ancient Greece and Ancient Rome. Though much less sophisticated, drama was always popular in the middle ages. It wasn't until the sixteenth century, however, that drama in England really found its feet and became a true art form. And all the while it increased in popularity. This trend didn't start with Shakespeare. Most of the most influencial trends in Elizabethan drama started before Shakespeare was involved with the theatre. Blank verse drama started with Gorbuduc, written at about the time of Shakespeare's birth, and comedy structures were evolving with Gammer Gerton's Needle and Ralph Roister Doister at about the same time. The first purpose-built theatres were built when Shakespeare was a schoolboy. The most popular tragedy of the time was written before Shakespeare wrote a word. Shakespeare and his generation of playwrights like Middleton, Dekker, Jonson and Heywood built on the foundations that had been laid over the previous thirty years or so.