no Shakespeare was very rich. every week he made 25,000 for just one week he had a play out.
Yes. When he retired he bought the second biggest house in his home town of Stratford-on-Avon
Eventually he became reasonably well-off, although for the first few years of his marriage he and Anne must have been desperately poor.
The theatres he invested in made money, the theatrical company he was a shareholder in made money, his published poetry made money, and he made money out of leasing property he bought.
Some of Shakespeare's early plays were very successful, particularly the Henry VI plays and Titus Andronicus. He may have written some clunkers before that which we don't know about, so it is difficult to say that he was immediately successful.
Hamnet was Shakespeare's son, and it affected Shakespeare financially, although I'm not exactly sure how. William Shakespeare was terrified of the plague because he lost a lot of his brothers and sisters to it during the first major outbreak of the Bubonic plague. This is what Shakespeare's only son, Hamnet, died from, so you can imagine his devastation. Also...affect with an 'a' is a verb, effect with an 'e' is a noun. (Cause and effect, This affects that)
The speaker has been successful in accomplishing the immortalizing of his love in the words of this poem.
William Shakespeare was a playwright he was also an actor but not a very successful one (he played minor characters in his own plays as well - for example he played the Ghost in Hamlet)
The short answer is no-one really knows. Very little is known about Shakespeare's early life and after the record of his Christening and his attending school in Stratford he pops up in London as an adult, already a successful playwright. People can only speculate about why he moved to London, how he entered the theatre and how he started to earn a living as a playwright.This isn't particular unusual - in fact more is known about Shakespeare than most other people of that period.What is consistently true about very successful people is a combination of talent, hard work and luck. So it is likely that Shakespeare had talent and luck as well as working hard.This entertained: also amused people... they started enjoying his plays and he became more popular! He knew people loved them and continued writing them; as people enjoyed them he became more and more....SUCCESSFUL!
Yes. He was able to buy New Place, one of the largest houses in Stratford, and left a sizeable estate.
very successful
Paul's mother says that Paul's father is not financially successful because he is not lucky.
Yes. Thanks for asking.
pyscho
Financially, very successful. Artistically, it's always a matter of opinion, as with any artist.
Game of Thrones
yes it was.
Yes
just because
So far, all the Pixar movies have been successful financially and critically (with the exception of Cars 2).
No, he wasn't. He was a successful actor and playwright.