London.
Theaters were built outside the city of London because many civic officials thought the performance of drama was immoral and would cause trouble. These theaters began to be built just before William Shakespeare wrote his first plays in the 1590s. Some of the well-known theaters include the Globe, the Curtain, the Swan, and the Hope.
London
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
Shakespeare only would write poems and plays for his company the "Kings Men"
The City Of Eber is coming out to theaters October 10th The City Of Eber is coming out to theaters October 10th
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.
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.
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.
The Leaders in london did not approve of theaters
It varies from city to city.
There is no such thing as a "Shakespeare Theatre". Shakespeare performed in theatres, and even invested some money in a couple, but he was not associated with the construction or design or ownership of theatres in his day, or even nowadays. In Shakespeare's day, the theatres in and around London were built either north of the city limits (The Theatre, The Curtain, The Fortune) or south of the river in Southwark (The Rose, The Globe, The Swan) because the city fathers would not permit the construction of a theatre in the city limits. Indoor playhouses, at first for the companies of child actors and later for adult companies were built inside the city over time. Certain Inns (such as the Bel Savage and the Cross Keys) were licenced for theatrical productions in the city in the early part of Shakespeare's career.