Shakespeare was an actor. The plays we know he acted in were two that he didn't write, although he must have played in his own as well. These plays were performed in London England, but during times of plague, the actors would play in various country towns throughout England. Shakespeare must have also played in them.
Stratford-Upon-Avon - England - there are a million websites on Shakespearean history - get searching!!!
William Shakespeare William Shakespeare was born in Stratford-upon-Avon in 1564, and probably lived there until around 1585. Sometime between 1585 and 1592 he moved to London.
It wasn't built in the City. The City wouldn't allow it. I was therefore built in the Borough of Southwark, south of the City
London, England
London
London
London
London
Shakespeare only would write poems and plays for his company the "Kings Men"
i think mos tof his plays where done in London
An internet search of the complete list of Shakespeare's plays includes two comedies that match your criteria:Merchant of VeniceTwo Gentlemen of Verona
Verona
London
Shakespeare only would write poems and plays for his company the "Kings Men"
London
The Blackfriars. It was actually purchased many years previously but the City did not allow adult companies to play in it. The King's Men started to use it in 1608 when the City changed its policy. But they produced plays by many playwrights, not just Shakespeare.
i think mos tof his plays where done in London
London.
An internet search of the complete list of Shakespeare's plays includes two comedies that match your criteria:Merchant of VeniceTwo Gentlemen of Verona
Yes; in 1988 Cynthia Nixon -- who plays Miranda Hobbes in "Sex and the City," portrayed Juliet from "Romeo and Juliet" for the New York Shakespeare Festival.
Most famously, in Central Park and on Broadway. The Shakespeare in the Park series at the public theatre in Central Park is an annual tradition. Many of Shakespeare's plays have run on Broadway over the years, including Richard Burton's Hamlet in 1964 and Paul Robeson's Othello in 1943-4.
Well, we don't know exactly. Toward the end of his career it's believed he helped train the playwright Fletcher as his replacement, so many of his later plays are actually partly written by Fletcher. At some point Fletcher started writing them himself with only a little help from Shakespeare and then none. Although Shakespeare moved back to Stratford, he still kept ties with the city and the theatre to his death.
Robinho ,started at Santos then moved to Real Madrid and now plays for Manchester City.
He went to the city of London and avoided prosecution.
They were not. We do not know a lot about Shakespeare's life, but what we know does not match events in the plays. Nobody in the plays has to get married at an early age because his girl is pregnant. Shakespeare's plays do not have plots about people leaving country towns to make their fortune in the big city, although stories of this nature abound. Although twins do make an appearance in the Comedy of Errors, they are identical twins, not fraternal. And the brother and sister pair in Twelfth Night are not twins. Shakespeare did not use events in his life as a basis for his plots. And, although people get excited about this, he did not use the names of his family members for his characters. The character Hamlet was not at all based on Shakespeare's son Hamnet. It's just a coincidence that they have similar names. It would be absurd to suggest that Shakespeare named King John after his father, or Ann Bullen after his wife, or Richard III after his brother. It is equally absurd to think that Hamlet is called that for any other reason than that he had always been called that. The nearest one might get to associating the plays with Shakespeare's life is to note that many of the late plays, especially Pericles, Cymbeline and The Winter's Tale, have themes about the reuniting of families long sundered, something that Shakespeare was planning for his own life at the time these plays were written. Of course, the same theme appears in The Comedy of Errors, one of Shakespeare's earliest plays, and Twelfth Night, a play from the middle of his career.