The Royal Shakespeare Company, or RSC, puts on eleven shows a year in Stratford. They often showcase productions on London's West End or in the Broadway district in New York City as well.
The Globe Theatre, unlike some of the other theatres, was used exclusively to put on plays. Other theatres, like the Hope and the Swan, sometimes had bearbaiting and other types of entertainment. However, contrary to popular supposition, they put on a broad variety of plays, and not just plays by Shakespeare. Shakespeare wrote no more than two or three new plays a year (after all, his total output was 38 plays in a 23-year career), yet the theatre companies had to premiere a new play every week or so. That means that most of the plays they put on were not by Shakespeare.
Shakespeare was also an actor, in addition to his plays and poetry. He and the other members of The Globe Theater put on many of the plays that they wrote.
They were actors. They put on plays.
Generally in churches. The plays of this time were put on by the church to tell bible stories. Later, guilds will sponsor the passion plays.
Shakespeare wrote his plays for theatre companies who would put them on and pay him for them. After he became a partner in a theatre company in 1594 he wrote all of his plays specifically for his own company to perform.
None. Shakespeare died in 1616 so he wasn't acting in 1997. Or did you mean "What plays by Shakespeare were performed in 1997?"? Well, it's impossible to be complete--how many amateur, college, high school, university and little theatre productions there might have been around the world (and Shakespeare has been performed literally everywhere in the world, often in translation) is beyond knowing. But as an example, the Stratford Festival in Stratford, Ontario put on Richard III, Coriolanus, Romeo and Juliet and the Taming of the Shrew in that Year. The National Theatre in London put on Othello. Patrick Stewart also played Othello in Washington DC that year. It was the first season for Shakespeare's Globe in London--they put on Henry V and The Winter's Tale. RSC put on Much Ado About Nothing. And so on and on and on. The attached link gives a list of companies around the world which are dedicated to putting on Shakespeare's plays. That does not include every single professional company anywhere which puts on a Shakesepeare play from time to time.
The Globe Theatre, unlike some of the other theatres, was used exclusively to put on plays. Other theatres, like the Hope and the Swan, sometimes had bearbaiting and other types of entertainment. However, contrary to popular supposition, they put on a broad variety of plays, and not just plays by Shakespeare. Shakespeare wrote no more than two or three new plays a year (after all, his total output was 38 plays in a 23-year career), yet the theatre companies had to premiere a new play every week or so. That means that most of the plays they put on were not by Shakespeare.
They aren't.
About 7.1 million a YEAR
Around 3 million dogs are put down each year. There isn't a record for the amount of each breed put to sleep each year.
Yes. Plays are italicized or put in quotes.
3000 are being put down
Shakespeare was also an actor, in addition to his plays and poetry. He and the other members of The Globe Theater put on many of the plays that they wrote.
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Yes I put a play together. Plays are fun to put on!
Primarily humans.
There were and are so many, but the most beloved, both in the Elizabethan and Modern Eras, would be 'Hamlet', which is far and away the most performed, filmed and quoted of all of Shakespeare's plays. Other popular plays in his era included 'Othello', 'Romeo and Juliet', 'Midsummer Night's Dream', 'King Richard III', 'Henry V', 'The Taming of the Shrew' and 'The Tempest' - amongst many others. It's unclear exactly how many times these shows were put on or how many people attended, but considering their maintained popularity, one would assume these plays to be the 'major', as you put it.