Sort of. The play Henry VIII has a scene where the infant Elizabeth is shown shortly after her birth, as the play treats largely with the subject of Henry's divorce from his first wife and marriage to Queen Elizabeth's mother, Anne Bullen. A number of flattering things are said about Queen Elizabeth, but she did not appreciate them. The play Henry VIII was written about ten years after she died.
Yes, she did Queen Elizabeth did she said it was the finest play she went to. Queen Elizabeth was in the court where Shakespeare's plays were performed, she attended a lot of his plays.
The play that is named after Queen Elizabeth's father is Henry VIII. The play was written by William Shakespeare in 1612.
When Shakespeare started writing plays there was no king in England. There was a queen, Elizabeth I. There were, of course kings in lots of other places like France or Spain at the time.
When Shakespeare started writing plays, Elizabeth I was Queen of England.
Romeo andd Juliet
Queen Elizabeth died in March of 1603. At about that time, Shakespeare was writing Troilus and Cressida and All's Well That Ends Well.
If Shakespeare wrote his plays for Queen Elizabeth it would be because Queen Elizabeth was held in high regard, so Shakespeare would have written the plays in her honor and name. However, Shakespeare did not write his plays for Queen Elizabeth. None of them are dedicated to her, and he wrote most of them after her death.
Henry VIII died quite a long time before Shakespeare was born, so he couldn't have asked Shakespeare anything. In fact, at the time Shakespeare wrote Henry VIII everyone in the play, including Elizabeth I, was dead.
"Gnomeo & Juliet" is a play upon the title of "Romeo and Juliet" by William Shakespeare .
"The Taming of the Shrew " is a play by William Shakespeare, it was also made into a movie.
I don't know what Elizabeth you are speaking of, but I presume it was because she was a female Shakespearean actress who was acting after the year 1660 sometime. Sometimes actresses play the male roles in Shakespeare as well.
Shakespeare adapted a play called King Leir and made it into another play called King Lear.