He was concerned about his daughter Judith, who had married a somewhat unsatisfactory husband in the person of Thomas Quiney. The will was rewritten to make sure that Quiney could not get hold of Judith's inheritance and blow it.
The King of England in the latter part of Shakespeare's life was James I.
We have no information about this part of Shakespeare's life. Sorry.
Shakespeare was a part owner of the Lord Chamberlain's Men, later known as the King's Men.
We do not know enough about this part of his life to answer this.
A theatre is a building and a person cannot become part of a building. What, do you think Shakespeare was a door or a railing? Shakespeare was part of a Theatrical Company, that is to say, a group of actors, called the Lord Chamberlain's Men and later The King's Men.
We have no records at all of what Shakespeare did or didn't like at any point in his life. That part of hislife is completely unknown.
We do not know, because this happened in the part of Shakespeare's life which is totally undocumented, sometimes called the "Lost Years" between 1585 and 1592.
In the latter part of his life, yes, the very early Baroque era.
Yes. He was part of the Chamberlain's Men, an acting society, who later changed their name to the King's Men.
You are probably thinking of this quotation from Shakespeare's Henry IV Part 1, spoken by Falstaff: "The better part of valour is discretion; in the which better part I have saved my life."
Nobody knows what his first job was. We have very very little information about that part of his life.
They were the acting company with which he was associated for nearly twenty years.