He didn't so much work for places as for companies. The acting company which he was with performed in more than one place (although since a bunch of them owned the Globe, that was their favourite). Shakespeare also had an interest in the Blackfriars Theatre, an indoor theatre, and when there was plague, the show would go on tour.
There was no acting company called the King's Men until 1603, and when it was started Shakespeare was one of the charter members.
music acting and theater work write plays like romeo and juleet
Those playwrights who were not also actors were paid per work by the acting companies that put their plays on. But at least after 1594, Shakespeare did not sell his plays in this way. Instead, his own acting company put them on and he had a share in the profits. In this way, Shakespeare was able to earn a decent living, unlike most playwrights of the time.
Shakespeare belonged to an acting company.
Shakespeare wasn't alive in 1954.
He wanted to do acting because of Shakespeare
Actors played all of Shakespeare's roles, because they were trained in acting.
As with all Shakespeare plays, they were written for Shakespeare's acting company.
As with all Shakespeare plays, they were written for Shakespeare's acting company.
The King's Men were Shakespeare's acting group. He was one of the more prominent members.
Women were forbidden to act in Shakespeare's theater, but they could and did work behind the scenes as costume mistresses particularly.
When King James I started paying Shakespeare's bills Shakespeare's Acting troupe changed its name to The King's Men.