Well, sort of. There is, for example, a London Critics Circle award for "Best Shakespearean Performance". That's an award, and it has to do with acting Shakespeare. Of course, your school could name one of its awards the "Shakespeare Award" and make up some criterion for winning it. It doesn't make it important, and it certainly has nothing to do with Shakespeare the man.
The Academy Award for Best Picture of 1998 went to "Shakespeare in Love."
The Academy Award for Best Picture of 1998 went to "Shakespeare in Love."
The only thing that William Shakespeare left his wife (Anne) in his will was "the second best bed".
Gwyneth Paltrow is the main actress in the 1998 film Shakespeare in Love. She won the Academy Award for Best Actress in 1998 for the role.
Hamlet
award
During those years Shakespeare was alive, and for many of them he was writing, which was a good thing.
no I'm pretty sure there's no such thing as a "New Berries" award, but if you mean Newbery award, then no, he didn't win one.
A proper noun for an award is the specific name of the award, such as the Nobel Prize, Pulitzer Prize, or Academy Award. Proper nouns are used to identify a particular person, place, or thing, and awards are no exception. By using the specific name of the award, we can distinguish it from other awards and provide clarity in communication.
Well, Shakespeare's partners were raising money to build a new theatre, for one thing.
Shakespeare in Love beat four other films to win the Best Picture award of 1998:ElizabethLife Is BeautifulSaving Private RyanThe Thin Red Line
Shakespeare did not receive any awards. Awards are a 20th Century phenomenon. He persuaded the College of Arms to award his father a Coat of Arms, which made him, by extension, a second generation gentleman.