Leaving aside the issue of which play was Shakespeare's first, I can get a brand new and totally perfect copy of one of Shakespeare's plays, printed last week, for about three bucks.
not much really... only Shakespeares Macbeth and Romeo and Juliet
A lot depends on whether it is a Quarto (single play) or a copy of the Folio (the collected plays). The highest price paid for a Quarto was on July 12, 2007, for a perfect copy of the fourth quarto of Richard III. The price was 1,750 pounds which at that time was equivalent to 8,750 USD. A First Folio, on the other hand, is worth much more. About a year earlier, in July 2006, a complete First Folio (a rare item, as only about 40 now exist) was sold for 2,500,000 pounds.
He survived it. That was an accomplishment in those days: his sisters Anne, Margaret and the first of his two sisters Joan as well as his son Hamnet could not say as much.
If you mean Claudio from Shakespeares play "Much ado about nothing" then the answer is Hero
A lot! You can b a millionaire! :)
Unless it is a first edition in good shape, or autographed, not much.
Not much at all, that would be Scott number US 970. You can buy a mint copy for 70 cents and a used copy for 15 cents. You would be lucky to find a dealer willing to give you 20 cents, and that is only for an absolutely perfect stamp.
A copy of anything is not worth much. It is not real and is a copy.
He started out with one-eighth, but as new partners were taken in, his share shrunk to one-fourteenth.
Probably his birth. He wouldn't have been able to do much if he hadn't been born.
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As a copy, it's not worth much of anything.