Yes, they included the famous actor Richard Burbage, the famous comedian Will Kemp, and the outstandingly famous playwright William Shakespeare.
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Lord Chamberlains men
Lord Chamberlains Men
They were a theatre company. They put on plays.
The Lord Chamberlain's Men were the acting company which William Shakespeare belonged to. He performed with them, and his plays were the property of the company. The connection of the company with Shakespeare is what makes it significant.
They are more commonly remembered as the King's Men.
He joined the Lord Chamberlains men which later changed their name to the Kings Men.
From 1594 on, Shakespeare performed with and wrote for the Lord Chamberlain's Men who in 1603 became the King's Men. Prior to 1594, he may have worked with one or more of the half dozen or so licensced companies: Pembroke's Men, Derby's Men, Strange's Men, or Queen Elizabeth's Men.
The owners of the Globe theatre were all members of the Lord Chamberlain's Men, including Richard and Cuthbert Burbage and William Shakespeare.
The Lord Chamberlain's men changed their name because they gained the patronage of the reigning monarch King James I thus becoming The King's Men.
They were the acting company with which he was associated for nearly twenty years.
They did not. They were formed as the Lord Chamberlain's Men in 1594. Their name changed to the King's Men (they did not have any choice in their name) when the King became their patron nine years later in 1603.